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A92846 The anatomy of secret sins, presumptuous sins, sins in dominion, & uprightness. Wherein divers weighty cases are resolved in relation to all those particulars: delivered in divers sermons preached at Mildreds in Bread-street London, on Psalm 19. 12, 13. Together with the remissibleness of all sin, and the irremissibleness of the sin against the Holy Ghost preached before an honourable auditory. By that reverend and faithfull minister of the Gospel, Mr. Obadiah Sedgwick, B.D. Perfected by himself, and published by those whom he intrusted with his notes. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658.; Chambers, Humphrey, 1598 or 9-1662. 1660 (1660) Wing S2363; Thomason E1003_1; ESTC R203493 249,727 327

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work no sinning wounds so deep as such which have more Mercy and goodness to control them and these only good persons do most taste of much grace received and much kindness conferred will in case of great transgressions make the conscience eagerly to arise and sting the Offender Such as profess more interest in God should walk more exactly with him Vse What should this teach us who profess more Interest in God more Title to Christ more purity of Religion then others Why if we be light then to walk as Children of the light if we do profess the Gospel then to walk as becomes the Gospel if we be the Children of God then to walk as dear Children cleansing our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit None needs to be more circumspect then he who is called to holiness his very relation is of a tender though high nature he cannot sin but he grieves a father yet this is as true that none of our relations exempt us from temptations and assaults which call upon us to be watchfull and prayerfull If temptations drive thee not to thy knees they will drive thee easily to the ground● no more but this no man should sin and no man should be more carefull then he who is most good for if he offends then God suffers Christ suffers the Gospel suffers Religion Profession Christians and all O then let us improve our interest in our God Should such a man as I flee said Nehemiah so then should such a man as I sin thus walk thus live do thus Why God is my God he is my Father I am his child his servant If I should sin sin would not only be my own wound but his dishonour I may not so abuse his love his mercies his Calling his honouring of me Others look on me but I must look on my God and on his honour Thus have you the general observations of the Text now I come to a more punctual and intimate view of them both in the petition and in the conclusion of them consider the words as a Petition they yield unto us two main considerations 1. One of sin in presumption Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins 2. Another of sin in Dominion Let them not have dominion over me First For presumptuous sins there are divers expositions of these words 1. Keep me Ab alienis scilicet peccatis from those sins which by the suggestion or temptation of others I am inticed to or as others Ab alienis i falsis diis from another or false gods that I do not serve them and be not captivated by them these think the Word to be Zurim from Zur which signifies Alienari 2. Keep me a superbiis Mizedim a verbo zud which signifies superbire aut superbie temere agere the word in Hiphel signifies to do a thing de industria per presumptionem Before David prays to be kept from sinnes of ignorance and here from prides from such sins as are done insolently and knowingly Some translate it keep me from proud sinnes others from insolent sins by which are meant manifest sinnes open transgressions committed with contumacy and with a high hand but to hold to the expression in the Text Presumptuous sinnes And the Observation is this CHAP. III. Doct. EVen the servants of God should pray to be kept The servants of God should pray to be kept from presumptuous sins from presumptuous sins Touching this I shall enquire into these particulars 1. What presumptuous sins are 2. Of that strength which keeps regenerate persons from presumptuous sinnings and what difference 'twixt the with-holdings and restrainings of evil men and this keeping back of good men 3. What reasons or causes of this desire to be kept back from presumptuous sins 4. Then some useful applications of all this to our selves SECT I. Quest 1. WHat presumptuous sins are What presumptuous sins are Sol. Sinne in the general is any transgression of the Law the Law of God is his revealed will for doing or forbearing and it is the rule of nature and actions whatsoever things stands in conformity to its good and whatsoever varies or swarves from it that same is sin Sins diversly distinguished Now sins are diversly distinguished for all sins are not equal either for matter or manner For matter some sins of themselves For Matter are more deep transgressions then others as some diseases in their own nature are worse then other some to blaspheme and curse God is a sin naturally more vile then an idle thought or an empty word and to commit Idolatry is naturally more vile then to steale a Shilling to shed innocent blood is worse then to steale Againe sins may be distinguished in restect of the manner of For Manner committing and thus it may fall out that even a sin in its own nature lesse then another may yet for the manner of commission be more hainous and a sin in its own nature greater then another may yet for the manner of commission be lesse guilting then a lesser sin which is more intensively raised by circumstances as to gather a few sticks on the Sabbath was in it selfe not so great a sin as deflouring of a virgin yet because the person did commit the sinne with a contempt of Gods expresse prohibition it became more hainous and guilty Now here falls in that distinction of sin into sins of infirmity Sins of infirmity and sins of presumption and into sins of presumption which distinction is made not from the different quallities of sin but from the divers qualification of sinning the same sin may be committed through presumption which is committed through Infirmity yet the commiting of it through infirmity is still much less and extenuating then the commiting of it through presumption for as much as all passive failings which arise from unevennesse of strength are not so high as the active trespassings which arise more from the readie contributions and concurrent assistances and furtherances of our own hearts now to the thing in particular Presumptuous sinnes are the bold darings and proud adventurings of the heart upon things or wayes known to be unlawful against expresse Presumptuous sins described threatnings either upon a false confidence or upon contemptuous slighting or desperate wilfulnesse I have in this description not only expressed the nature of presumptuous sinnings but also concluded in it the several degrees and risings thereof all which give mee now liberty to open and explaine consider therefore 1. That presumptuous sinnings are proud adventurings of the heart upon sinne there is a large difference 'twixt foilings Presumptuous sinnings are proud adventurings upon sin by temptation and adventurings by presumption Temptation beats down that actual strength of grace resisting but presumption tramples down the light of the word opposing therefore presumptuous sinners are said to sinne with an exalted or high hand the sinner doth put aside Gods will and prefers his
soul doth as it were shut its eyes and stop its ears it doth break away to the sin against all the discoveries and clear impleadings of knowledg gainsaying and withstanding it the presumptuous person goes not to sin ignorantly but he doth it by imprinted light so the sin as Gods enemy which yet he will embrace as his friend yea the more Inexcusable that a sin is the worse it is when little or nothing can be said in behalf of the siner thus is it in presumptuous sinings the man cannot say I did not know it I was not warned 2. The more pride of heart accompanies any kind of sinning The more pride of heart in any sinning the viler it is this makes it the more vile for pride lifts up the point of the sword it shakes the speare against God when the will of God and the will of a sinner come into a competition about sining then pride growes high Who is the Lord saith Pharaoh that I should let Israel goe Exod. 3. Who is Lord over us said they in Psalme 12. when the heart goes proudly to sin it will acknowledge noe Lord but it s own pleasure and no rule but it s own resolution it can slight a precept and scorne a threatning Now presumptuous sinnings are filled with pride I think St. Austine had an aime at this in his exposition of this v. when he rendered the reading of it thus contine servum tuum a superbiis keep back thy servant from prides as if pride were knotted and folded doubled in presumptuous sinnings there was pride and pride again in that heart which durst thus to sinne and verily so there is in presumptuous sinnings a manifold pride a pride of judgement to approve that which God hath branded and condemned a pride of will to rise up to that which God would have the sinner forbear A pride of security to make a Sanctuary for the soul when God hath threatned wrath c. 3. The more impudency and boldnesse attends a sinning the worse it is There is a double impudency about sinning One of defence when the sinne hath been committed of which I am not now to speak which is no more but to paint The more impudency in sinning the worse it is a whore or to cover a plain sore to make that seeme good which really is stark nau●ht Another of entrance when the sinful soul layes aside all shame and fear and modesty and restraints and arguments said he whatsoever may be said come of it whatsoever may come yet I wi●l on let God take it well or take it ill let him beseech by mercy or warne by threatnings nothing moves neither my peace nor comfort nor soul prevail nor my shame nor trouble nor misery keep back But thus it is in presumptuous sinnings the heart is bold and impudent which can look so much mercy in the face and yet will dare to sinne which can look so many threatnings in the face yet wil dare to sin which can look its own great misery in respect of the issue Note and end of the sinnin in the face and yet will dare to sinne nay which can perhaps look many former experiences of bitte●ness and anguish for the same sinful adventurings in the face and yet will dare to sin puttin● the hand into the fire ag●in which hath burned it and venturnig to swim in those waters where had not Gods mercy stept in the soul had long since been drowned 4. The more abuse of mercy concurs to the sinning the more hainous it raiseth the sinne for mercy is the sweetest stop of a The more Mercy is abused the more hainous the sin sinner and the kindness of it should smooth off the soule from offending what is mercy but that unspeakable readinesse in God to forgive a sinner a gracious willingnesse to sit down with wrong offered if yet the sinner will come in and the abusings of it are affronts to the highest love But now in presumptuous sinnings mercy is extreamly abused First in that it hath not its dir●ct end the direct end of mercy is to awe and to keep off the heart from sinne There is mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feare Psal 130. But the presumptuous sinner is lesse fearful because God is so merciful and the mercies of God should lead to repentance Rom. 2. But the presumptuous sinner yet dares to hold on the sinful trade Secondly when it is made to serve and to encourage sinne O this is the imbasing of that high and tender attribute of God when we draw out from his goodnesse to embolden the heart to wickednesse as if that God whose soul abhorres sinne would let fall any expression to hearten a sinner yet thus it is with the presuming sinner the very mercy of God makes him bold to sin against God the confidence of that easiness in God to forgive occasions him therefore to adventure and multiply transgressions In respect of others 3. In respect of others David had good reasons to pray to be kept from presumptuous sinnes in respect of others as well as in respect of himself whither you consider his general calling a man of goodness or his particular calling a man of dignity and place but I will fold them both together thus then 2. Reasons His sins would be exemplary 1. Such sinnes would be exemplary and noted There are three things which set a man upon the stage which lift up his actions on high to the eye of the word One is his powerful and active sanctity a very holy man is a kinde of a wondrous sight after which many eyes are gazing Godlinesse is a very rare thing and therefore men look much upon him who professeth it Another is his singular dignity lift a man out of the croud advance him to a place and seat of honour above others how busie is the multitude to eye and judge and imitate him The wayes and actions of great persons are usually the present copies of the most A third is his notorious miscarriages which are like the tayle of a blazing comet the great sinning of good orgreat men fall instantly into common discourse and perhaps also easily into common practice Therefore great cause had David to pray against presumptuous sinnes which by his practice might prove a common snare for who will not confidently write after that sinful copy which both goodnesse and greatnesse have begun that which the great man dot● the inferior person will do and that which the good man doth that the evil man thinks he may now lawfully do if knowledge will venture ignorance supposeth that it may safely follow and if holinesse will adventure why should profaneness be so nice as to stop The way or fact is credited either as not bad or else not so dangerous where either authority or profession are leaders Now this might be some cause to move good David to pray to be kept back from presumptuous sins
very sorrowful Herod heares John Baptist gladly and did many things yea but it is not lawful for thee to have thy brothers wife said John unto him how doth this doctrine this duty go downe with him John lost his liberty and then his head for his labour 2. Constancy of obedience The Physicians do observe a Constancy of obedience Simile difference twixt the natural and preternatural heate in mens bodies the preternatural heat which ariseth from distemper may be more for the present but as it exceeds for measure so it abates for time because the natural heat is a more equal and moderate and durable heat every part hath an equal share and it is not extreame and yet it continues Thus it is with hypocrites and upright persons in the matter of obedience The hypocrite may in a kinde of preternatural heat he may in a fit in a present heat fall violently upon duty upon resolution O what a man will he become how shall his family be reformed and now he will read and hear and pray and he will leave his sinne but anon he hath lost his heat the cold fit takes him he restraines prayer he layes aside his resolutions will the hypocrite pray always There are three times wherein an hypocrite may expresse great forwardnesse in duties in services to God 1. One when straits of conscience are on him and the fear of death are ready to lay hold on him In their affliction they poured out a prayer unto me Esay 26. 16. Pharaoh and Ahab were much wrought upon in their exigences Psal 78. when he slew them then they ought him 2. Another when obedience and duty are not dangerous but calme and commodious As the Samaritans when the Jews prospered c. Therefore Christ sets out an Hypocrite by that ground which was stony and had not much earth upon which the seed fell and forthwith sprang up without any more ado Matth. 13. 5. but when the Sunne was up it was scorched and withered away ver 6. He applies it to hypocrites who hear the word and receive it with joy verse 20. And yet this endureth but for a while for when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the Word by and by he is offended ver 21. If Gods service be so hot so dangerous if it must cost him his liberty his estate his friends his ease his life then farwel it The house built on the sands when the wind arose it fell Mat. 7. 27. 3. When he hath some props or in the presence of others Many do duties while Moses is present or Jehoiadah lives or the good judges continue but if Moses be absent then the Israelites turn Idolaters and if Jehoiadah dies then Joash is naught and if the Judges die then the Israelites do what is right in their own eyes But where the person is upright there the obedience is constant he doth righteousness at all times Paul serves Christ in fasting and prayer in bonds and affliction and many temptations and Job who was an upright person by Gods own testimony chap. 1. 1. he followed God continually v. 5. and though that Satan thought that hard exigences would have turned him off from his obediential course yet he did still cleave to God after the losse of cattel and estate and children yet you may read his constancy chap. 2. 3. The Lord said unto Satan h●st thou considered my servant Job that there is none like him in the earth a perfect and upright man one that feareth God and escheweth evil and still he holds fast his integrity although thou movest me against him Yet mistake not the right compasse of constancy in obedience as if there were no act of disobedience as if a man were not upright unlesse there were an inviolable succession of disobedience in every thing which he doth at every moment O no! I know no such kinde of constant obedience which is exempted from all interruption but the constancy of his obedience lives in an opposition to fits and starts and imports the course and bent of his life which is always to walk with and to obey God 3. Simplicity of obedience as Saint Austine distinguisheth Simplicity of obedience of a love of God that one may love God for God and a man may love God for himself the same doth hold in service and obedience a man may serve God for God and serve God for himself Doth Job serve God for naught Job 1. that I confesse may be truly a friend of an hypocrite who hath an eye only to the wages like the Germans in their warres do nothing without pay The unsound heart will square out his work according to the pay his eye is much upon this how will this make for my profit how will it advance my pleasure my credit these things fire and inflame an unsound heart come to such an heart and say such or such a thing is to be done For it is Gods expresse will and it will make for his glory these alone are cold motives and weak induce ments to a false-hearted person But come and say God will have you to do it and if you do it you shall be highly thought on you will be esteemed for it you shall have much applause you may hap to get well by it why now the unsound heart stirs Simile as the ship which hath got a right winde to drive it and carry it on But the upright person is simple in his obedience a naked command is reason enough for him to obey and Gods glory is a sufficient motive If a servant be faithful in his factoridge why it is enough to him in the managing of businesse if he can set forward his masters stock his prosperity is all that he looks on And thus is uprightnesse descried in our obedience when we minde God above our selves when God alone is cause enough of our obedience unto God Quest How may one know that he looks not at himself but at Gods commands Answ Thus 1. By his cordial blessings and rejoycings at the good done by others whereby God hath glory though he be not the instrument as Paul Phil. 1. 18. 2. By his acting for God under disgraces and discouragements as David and the three children Though our services may want encouragement from worldly motives nay though they meet with many discouragements and prejudices to us yet so that by them God may receive glory and I may expresse my obediential respect to him here is winde enough to sill my ●ailes I dare not do it because God forbids I will do it because God commands I will not cease to do it though I receive frowns and losse but will hold on to do it because Gods receives glo●y this is simplicity of obedience and this argues the person to be upright Paul speaketh of this simplicity of obedience for his own part in the exercise of his Ministerial function which he well joynes with Go●ly sincerity 2 Cor. 1. 12.
be rid of a bad nature the vertue of the effect alwayes lurks in the cause and therefore it is the cause which gives life and death to it If thou couldest once get an holy nature which might be at defiance with sinne in its throne know this that a new nature and daily combat would much help against secret sinnings That sinne is least of all acted with life which is most of all combated within the heart for sinne hath least practise where it hath most opposition And of all oppositions those that are inward are most weakning of sin 4. Get an hatred of sinne which will oppose sin in all kindes and all times and in all places 5. Get the feare of God planted in thy heart There are three sorts of sinnes which this fear will preserve a man Get the feare of God against First Pleasant sinnes which take the sense with delight Secondly Profitable sinnes which take the heart with gaine but what shall it profit me to winne the whole world and to lose my soul Thirdly secret sinnes of either sort Joseph did not dare to sinne that great sinne of uncleannesse though the acting of it might have beene secret and thou●h perhaps the consequence of it mi●ht have been his preferment why the fear of God kept him off he had an awful regard to God he knew the greatnesse of his holinesse of his power How can I do this great wickednesse and ●●nne against God Gen. 39. 9. Why brethren if we feare the Lord it is not the night which the thief doth take nor the twilight which the adulterer doth take nor the seasons of secrecy or places of obscurity that will prevaile with us c. Yea but God sees me the great judge of heaven and earth the holy one the God who hates all sinne whose eyes are brighter then the Sunne and purer then to behold sin and who is mighty in power and just in his threatnings he sees and beholds therefore I dare not 6. Believe Gods omniscience and omnipresence that the Believed Gods omniscience Lord is every where and all things are naked and open to his eye with whom thou hast to deal thou canst not intend to think thou canst not whisper out thy thou●hts thou canst not finger the closest bribes thou canst not encline thy self to the most abstracted kinde of secrecy in the world but God sees thee clearly perfectly now if a man could believe that God is still with us and there are two which evermore goe with us the Judge and the Register God and conscience that he is acquainted with all his thoughts paths wayes this would put an awe upon him would the wife be so impudent to commit folly and prostitute her whorish body in the sight and presence of her husband would the servant be filching out of the box if he saw his Masters eye upon his hand 7. Get thy heart to be upright uprightnesse is an inward temper and hypocrisie is an outward complection Psalme Get thy heart to be upright 119. 3. They do no iniquity c. The inward man is the businesse of sincerity to the forming and fashioning of that doth it improve and imploy it selfe it knowes that God delights in truth and this too in the inward parts It endeavours to please God in all things and there to be most to God where man can be least in observation and that is in the secret and hidden frame PSAL. 19. 13. Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sinnes let them not have dominion over me then shall I be upright and shall be innocent from that great transgression CHAP. II. THese words containe in them Davids second Petition and request sinnes do not only differ in respect of opennesse and secretness but also in respect of the degree of hainousness and greatness now because secret sins sticks closest and are of a more easie and adventrous commission therefore David prays much against them Lord cleanse thou me from secret sinnes And because presumptuous sinnes are of a more fearful efficacy and consequently they being usually the bravings of God even to his face therefore David prays as vehemently against them in this verse This verse may be considered two ways The words considered 1. Respectively as in connection with the former by that In conjunction with the former word also keep back thy servant also as if David had said O Lord I have prayed unto thee to be cleansed from secret sinnes and I beseech thee let me be answered but yet this is not all that I have to request I have yet another request besides that keep me also from presumptuous sins 2. Absolutely in regard of their proper matter so they In their proper matter comprehend 1. The Petitioner thy servant 2. The Petition which respects sins 1. Presumption from presumptuous sins 2. Dominion let them not have Dominion over me 3. The Petitioner who is implyed and that is God yet expressed by what he should do keep back c. 4. The Conclusion or inference which he makes from the grant of all this which is his uprightness and innocency innocency not absolute but limitted innocent from that great transgression There is more matter in these words then you yet well conceive of I will touch some Propositions which might challenge a further prosecution and then I will set down at large upon the main intentions and conclusions from the words considered as a connexion of a new request with the former request these things might be observable viz. SECT I. Doct. 1 FIrst There may and should be a conjunction even of great There may and should be a conjunction of great requests at once to God Petitions and requests at once unto God As they say of graces and duties that they are connexed and like so many pearls upon one and the same string for we may say of requests to God though they be many for kindes and number and matter yet they may be put up in the same prayer to God David ends not at that request keep me from secret sinnes but goes on also O Lord keep me from presumptuous sinnes he multiplies his suits according to the multiplicity of his necessity and exigence Note There be divers qualities about our prayers viz. Our prayers must be with 1. One is an urgent fervency when the soul doth not nakedly commence the suit propound it to God and say Lord 1. urgent fervency hear me but it doth inforce as it were an audience and acceptance it doth strive with God and wrestle with him I will not let thee go unless thou blesse me Gen. 32. 26. as Jacob And O Lord hear O Lord hearken and consi●er do and deferre not for thy name sake as Dan. 9. this is a following of the suit with God as the woman did Christ 2. Importunity when a person renews the same suit comes 2. Importunity often to the door of grace and knocks 3.
requests ascend from one sin to more from more to many from many to all you know that confession of sins should not be particular only but universal and our sorrow for sin should respect the kinds as well as the particular acts all which import an Amplitude of grants so much Mercy and supply answerable to the required latitude of confessions and sorrow Object Object 'T is true some one sin may upon special reason either of some guilt or present insolency be more insisted on then another as one clause in the plea may be more urged then any other yet not with the exception of the rest Sol. O that sin Lord by which I have dishonoured thee so much and yet which rageth so much pardon it subdue it out with it and not that only but such sins and not them only but all my sins blot them out cleanse me from them Another Proposition which I will briefly touch on shall be this viz. SECT II. Doct. 2 THat even a good Christian should have a fear of great sins A good Christian should fear g●eat ●●ns as well as less Reasons from The latitude of original sin as well as a care of secret sins Keep me also from presumptuous sins Reasons whereof may be these The latitude of original sin which as it is yet remaining in the best so it i● in them an universal fountain naturally apt to any vile inclination though actual sins may be divided in the life yet they are all united in their spring i they are all of them virtually as so many potential effects involved and lurking in original sin as their cause which how far it may work both from its own strength and the assistance of temptions and occasions if God doth not actually prevent and interpose if we put not forth our fear and watch we may with miserable experience both know and bewail 2. The instances of great transgressions even those Saints 2. The best Saints have been guilty of great Transgressions who have been as the highest stars have left behind them their twinklings and sad Eclipses Noah his actual distempers by wine Lot his unnatural defilements by incest David his wounds and bleeding by whoredom and blood Peter his unkind and troubled denial of Christ against his knowledge Now when Cedars fall should not the tender plants tremble if the sins of others be not our fear they may be our practise what the best have done the weakest may imitate if they do not hear and fear there being scarce any notorious sin into which self-confidence will not plunge us and from which an holy and watchfull fear may not happily preserve us Vse An Instruction from this and so on Blessed is the man that Blessed is he that feareth alwayes feareth alwayes Prov. 28. 14. When we read of great sinners in the Scripture and see great falls and sins in others as we should thereupon seek to recover them who are thus fallen by our Counsel and prayers so we that stand should take heed lest we also fall 1 Cor. 10. 12. If that Satan who would deal with us could be procured to shape out only mean and vulgar assaults and suggestions to common and unavoidable infirmities and sinnings this might somewhat abate the vigour and intension of our holy fear and circumspection yet not altogether forasmuch as he being a subtile enemy trains and facilitates the heart by the frequency of small commissions at length to the boldness of great Impieties or if Satans suggestions were artificially and extreamly laid and pressing to great sins as well as small yet if we had natures no way capable to receive the greatest impressions of sin but were naturally averse and stifly indisposed to such temptations then our carefull fear were not so requisite But we are not shot-proof Temptations even to the greatest sinnes have within our breast some principles which would presently shake hands with them The actual light and acting grace do sometimes happily turn them aside from closing though they keep them at the door as the Prophet caused the Messengers who came from the King to take away his life Yet there is another Principle of corruption which would let them in and which would co-operate with those temptations even to Contemplation and inclination and acting both inward and outward nay this corrupt nature of ours alone though it doth learn somewhat by temptations and occasions yet it alone from it self can cast forth most sore temptations to most abhorred sinnings Therefore this we must do fore-past sins must be eyed with grief present inclinations with combat and future with fear we must not in our War imitate the Syrians who were to fight neither with small nor great but with the King of Israel No but we must oppose all sins small sins as well as great and great as well as small those sins which do encounter us we should force some out and keep the rest off He is a wise and sincere Christian who resists the smallest and fears the greatest sins Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins SECT III. Doct. 3 ANother Proposition which I might observe from the words absolutely considered is this That a good man A good man is Gods servant is Gods s●rvant Thy servant from c. We read of divers servants in the Scriptures some are the servants of men who apply all their gifts and parts and sacrifice the whole method of their beings and expressings to claw and humour the itch and pleasure of others All flatterers are such who are a people of slavish-bondage having sold themselves from themselves to some persons Some are the servants of the world whose hearts and labors are bestowed upon earthly things and they make even those noble souls of theirs to weary themselves for very vanity and to increase only in that with the least toe is too excellent to tread upon Some are the Servants of Satan mentioned in an instrumental Activity and readiness to entertain and execute his base and hellish inspirations and motions Some are the servants of sin who quales quanti all that they are and can do is to fulfill the lusts of their flesh there is no servant so obedientially attending the Command of his Lord as they to receive and act the pleasure of their sinfull hearts Some are servants to themselves who as if they were born neither for God nor man apply all their will and strength and abilities only to their own ends without any real effectual consideration to publique good of Church or Country And some are servants to God Moses was so Simeon was so Moses my servant is deal said God Now letest thou thy servant depart in peace said Simeon and David here Keep back thy servant Gods servants disters from all servants in the world every other servant looseth himself by service Note he is not sui juris in the Law but the only way to find a mans self is to be Gods servant Every
government of Christ they do consent unto him that he only shall rule them and they do resigne up themselves to his will they do bestow their hearts and service on him Beloved when a person makes choice of Christ to be his Lord he doth consider the several kinds of dominion of sin of the World of the Devil of Christ he considers them seriously and compares them and then he findes that no dominion for a mans soul is like Christs none so righteous and just none so holy and heavenly none so sweet and profitable Christ hath the only right to the soul and his government is infinitely best Now the person hereupon makes choice of Christ and comes unto him with humble tears and beseecheth him to reigne over him O blessed Jesus saith the soul thou art the only Lord and there is none like thee or besides thee I have been a rebel an enemy unto thee I have been disobedient and have served divers lusts and pleasures I have served the world and the Prince of darknesse but now I renounce their service and condemne my slavery and come unto thee to be my Lord. Thy title is just and proper to my soul it is thy purchase and therefore the service of it belongs to thee Thy precepts and commands are righteous and holy therefore doth thy servant make choice of thee and love them thou wouldst have my heart my will my affections my life and who should have them but thy self upon thee do I bestow my self and most gladly do I consent to thy holy wil and resigne up all the strength and powers of all that I am or have or can do to the service and honor of thee though sin rage yet I will serve thee though the world frown or fawne yet I will serve thee though Satan tempt yet I wi●l serve thee My heart I bestow on thee as well as my safeties my service I bestow on thee as well as my hopes thy honour I desire sincerely to intend my love I set on thee my fear is of thee my greatest care shall be to obey thy will and my only joy to bring thee glory such a choice of Christ to be our Lord infallibly argues that sin hath not dominion forasmuch as this cannot be without the change of the heart and whole man which change cannot consist with sinnes dominion 2. If sin and we be enemies then sinne is not our Lord. If sin and we be enemies Sin is an enemy Really Sin is an enemy two ways Either Really thus it is an enemy to him who yet dearly loves and faithfully serves it thou●h it gives unto a man the wages of unri●hteousnesse many sinful pleasures and many sinful profits yet in all these sin is an enemy to the person it wo●ks his soul off from God and happinesse and holiness and exposeth it to death and hell Practically thus sin is an enemy when a man looks upon Practically it and deals with it as with an enemy he judgeth of it as of a vi●e thin● and hates it and abhors it as the only evill thing and enemy to his soul Beloved when sin hath dominion there is then a confederacy 'twixt it and the soul the Prophet calls it a Covenant and the Apostle calls it a contract or espous●l● or marriage i. such an agreement and conjunction where the soul bestows its choicest love on sin But when the dominion of sinne goes off then the Covenant is broken the knot is dissolved the affection of love is displaced As it was in another case Amons love turned to the cruelest hatred so here though a man did love his sins yet now his love is changed into hatred and this hatred infallibly argues the indominion of sin for 1. Hatred includes separation It is such a quality as draws off Hatred includes separation the sou love is that which draws on the soul towards its object and hatred is that which draws it off Get thee hence said they in Esay 30. 22. and what have I to do any more with idol said Ephraim Hos 14. 8. Now sinnes dominion consists in the cleaving and united subjection of the affections the soul makes sin its centre unto which it wholly inclines it and the soul are one when sin reignes and therefore the separation of the affections which is done by hatred argues that the yoke is broken asunder 2. Again hatred includes perfect opposition the greatest defiance Hatred includes perfect opposition and contradictions and warrings arise from hatred we oppose and crosse most where we hate most And this cannot be where sinne hath dominion for there our weapons are edged for our lusts we love them much and defend them most and are careful to preserve and keepe them Thirdly hatred inclines to destruction Ruine is the scope Hatred inclines to destruction of hatred we seek the death of him whom we hate and all the evil which befals a person hated is the joy of him that hates So is it where sin is hated a man seeks the death of sin and therefore such persons as hate sinne are said in Scripture to mortifie the flesh and to crucifie ●heir lusts i. the killing and subduing and rooting out of sinne is that which they desire and endeavour Now this cannot stand with sin in dominion where a man is so far from offering any deadly violence to his reigning sins that he reputes him as the greatest enemy who drawes forth any crucifying weapons and applies them to the casting downe of his strong holds 3. If holiness or grace hath our love then sin hath not dominion over us If holinesse here our love Beloved it is granted that 1. The Dominion of sin may consist with the naked profession The dominion of sin may consist with the naked profession of holines● of holinesse An hypocrite whose heart is in the deepest and most affectionate and elaborate service of some one particular lust he may yet wear the livery and garb and profession of greatest sanctity Nay he doth therefore seem good that he may the more inobservably and fully follow his sinne 2. The Dominion of sin may consist with the knowledge of holiness great parts and intellectual speculations of holinesse And with the knowledge of holinesse as they may depend upon forraigne causes without grace viz. upon meer study and frequent hearings and a natural desire of knowing and looking into all intelligible objects and also on an humour of pride that a man will be accounted able to say something in every thing I say as those intellectual parts may depend upon weak and vain causes so they may consist with an ardent love of reigning corruptions for learning alters not the nature nor doth more knowledge overthrow sin a man may be a learned sinner and by his knowledge grow more accurately and inexcusably sinfull 3. The Dominion of sin may consist with some visible actings And with some visible actings of holinesse of
and others well observe they had but one ingredient to stave them off from being the sin against the Holy Ghost viz. Ignorance 1 Tim. 1. 13. he presents a brief survey of his great transgressions He was a Blasphemer i. one who did cast contumely and reproach on God and Christ whose nature was Divine and therefore every way venerable but he scoffed and mocked at Christ and his Truths He was a Persecutor too he did not only deride Ch●ist but endeavoured to exile and banish him out of the world to thrust him away from the society of sinners who in so great mercy came to save sinners Whereupon St. Austin judged well Nemo acrior Paulo inter Persecutores nemo ergo pejor inter peccatores Paul was the quickest persecutor and therefore the vilest sinner Nay and he was injurious he did not only exercise his thoughts and heart his tongue and invectives against Christ but his hand and strength he did consent to the death of persons for Christ To have a hand in blood is a crying sin but how heinous is it to have a hand in the blood of Christ to crucifie him afresh in his members yet saith he I obtained mercy A blasphemer yet I obtained mercy A Persecutor yet I obtained mercy Injurious yet I obtained mercy I will give you but one instance more out of 1 Cor. 6. 9. Neither fornicators nor Idolaters nor Adulterers not effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with mankind verse 10. Nor thieves nor covetous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the kingdom of God Here are some sinners which have destroyed a whole world and others which have started up hell on earth to devour sinners and all of them such as meritoriously shut the gate of happiness yet mercy hath stretched out the Scepter to some persons guilty of them Verse 11. And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 3. The essential and natural disposition of God The Essential and natural disposition of God Mercy is not a quality extrinsecally imposed or acquired but intrinsecal and most natural and therefore exerciseable with freest facility and readiest constancy The eye is not weary with seeing nor God with pardoning because that is natural to the eye and this is to God This you know the power of any thing is answerable to the nature The nature of God is infinite and so is his power Omnipotente Medico nullus insanabilis occurrit languor saith Isidore Pelusiota And St. Austin Grave est quod habeo sed ad Omnipotentem fugio In Psal 51. Therefore is it that his Mercies are stiled Riches of mercies and multitudes of mercies and great mercies and compared to the depths of the sea Mic. 7. and to the strength of the sun Isa 44. and to the vastness of the heavens in comparison of the earth Isa 55. As Mercifulness is natural in him so is it gracious The Lord mercifull and gracious Exod. 34. If mercy were to be bought there were no hope for any sinner but being free now there is a possibility for any A sinner may plead for mercy even out of the goodness of mercy As it is disp●nsed graciously without desert on our part so likewise delightfully without repining on Gods part He delighteth in Mercy saith the Prophet Mic. 7. 18. It is a work that God would do Two things God delights in Our Conversion and our Remission 4. The vertue and sufficiency of the blood of Christ which was shed for the remission of sins Mat. 26. 28. that was The vertue and sufficiency of the blood of Christ one end to procure our pardon but for what sins that is not expressed because no sin is excluded you cannot say that Christ dyed only for small sins or only for great sins nay the offer of Christ to all sinners doth confirm it How can this offer be indefinite How can it be said Whosoever believes shall be saved unless you grant a possibility of mercy 5. The effects of mercy in the Creature which point to an infinite fulness in the Creator The vertue in the cause ever The effects of Mercy in the Creature exceeds that in the effect and according to the generality in the cause is the intention of the vertue in that cause If I discern any light in the beams I apprehend much more in the Sun If I feel any moisture in smaller drops I know there is much more in the large ocean All the mercy in the Creature is derivative and as so many beams and drops lead us to the infinite fulness of mercy in God the universal and prime fountain of all compassion God himself reasons from the compassion of a mother to her own and Christ tells us If we forgive those that trespass against us our heavenly Father will also forgive us our trespasses Surely if we must forgive seventy times God doth much more multiply forgivenesses 6. It is all one to the Lord to forgive great sins as well as small It is all one to God to forgive great as well as small sins Luke 7. 41. There was a Creditor which had two Debtors the one ought him 500. pence and the other 50. pence and when they had nothing to pay he frankly forgave them both There was a difference of the debt 50. and 500. one of them many hundred times exceeding the other the debts were different but the forgiveness was equal and the manner of forgiveness the easiness was alike both of them was frankly i freely readily forgiven Now I proceed to the application of all this Is there a Use possibility for the pardon of any sin Information 1. An impenitent sinner is utterly inexcusable who will continue in sin where so much grace doth abound I do confess that An impenitent sinner is utterly inexcusable many turn the grace of God into wantonness and because of the richness readiness of divine mercy therefore presume to add drunkenness to thirst giving the reins to all licentiousness and obduration of Spirit and why because God is mercifull But hear what the Apostle saith Rom. 2. Knowest thou not O man that the mercies of God should lead thee to Repentance but thou through the hardness and impenitency of thy heart treasurest unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath I pray you to remember 1. That the end of mercy is not confirmation in sin but a Reformation of sin There is mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feared said David 2. That Mercy is the sweetest cord to draw us off from sin When God might justly doom a sinner yet he graciously presents his mercy to pardon him Loe yet there is mercy I beseech thee by the mercies of God to leave thy sins this is a melting argument 3. That Mercy is the strongest argument to draw men off from Sin The torments of hell cannot work
so much as the mercies of heaven Nothing in the world will prevail upon a sinner if mercy doth not 4. If mercy doth not prevail a mans Damnation befalls him without all Apology Ah what a sad appearing will it be for us when we must die and stand before God and the Lord shall in that day object to us before men and Angels This is the person unto whom I freely offered the pardon of all the sins that ever he committed and offered him in the word of God that if he would leave his sins I would forgive them but he preferred his sins before my mercy For lying vanities he forsook his mercies And thy own conscience shall then testifie that thus it was I had mercy offered again and again and yet I would continue in my sins Judge what blackness of darkness and degrees of eternal confusion thou shall contract when so great a door of mercy is opened but for a lust sake thou wilt not enter in thou wilt not accept of it 2. Then no sinner hath cause sufficient to despair I know full well that before God makes us sensible of sin we are apt to No sinner hath cause sufficient to despair presume but being once made sensible we are very apt to despair It is the great art of the devil either to make us die in a senceless calm or else to perish in an unquiet storm either to make us undervalew our sins and so to slay us with security or else to undervalew mercy and so to sink us with despair Oh saith the awakened conscience my sins are so many and so great I have continued long in them gone on in them after knowledge after the invitations of mercy after the strokes of afflictions after many a secret check and bitter words from my conscience now there remains no hope no no others whose sins are fewer in number lightet in weight not edged and raised by such circumstances they may hope but I can have no confidence mercy will never look upon such a one as I am Nay but readest thou not the Text and they are the words of a Saviour That all manner of sin may find forgiveness though there because enough to despair of thy own strength yet there is no cause to despair of Gods mercy Two things only remember here 1. Despair is no remedy to any sinner It may bind on his sins the faster but never heals the soul nor easeth the conscience nor pleaseth God 2. Whatsoever thy sins have been if at length thou canst find an heart to repent God can find mercy to pardon I affirm it no sinner ever perished because God wanted skill to help but because he wanted a heart to make use of his help To perswade men to make out for pardon 3. But the main use I would make of this point is To perswade men to make out for this pardon you see here the extent of Mercy the possibility of pardon Why do you look one upon another said Jacob to his sons Behold I have heard there is corn in Egypt get you down thither that we may live and not die Why stand you amazed and backward you that are so full of spiritual wants why come you not to mercy that you may live and not die here is a store-house of mercy Behold said the servants of Benhadab We have heard that the King of Israel is a mercifull King let us go to him peradventure he will save thy life 1 King 20. 31. We hear that the King of heaven is mercifull and yet we address not our selves unto him we hear that there is Balm in Gilead yet we sue not to be healed we hear that the Arms of Christare yet open and we run not to be embraced Ah! our folly and madness that being so greatly diseased we fly our Physick that being so in deep rebellions we lay not down our weapons and submit not upon the tender of the freest pardon As I live saith the Lord I delight not in the death of a sinner Why will you die O house of Israel Why do we by lying vanities forsake our Mercies how my soul bleeds at the wretched hardness of our hearts God is mercifull and we are sinfull yea we are the more bold in sin because God is the more abundant in mercy Continue in sin because Grace doth abound Rom. 6. 1. Thus do we abuse the grace God to wantonness and bane our souls by the sweet Remedy of sin There is mercy with thee that thou mayest be feared said David and he who confesseth and forsaketh his sins shall have mercy saith Solomon and knowest thou not that the mercies of God should lead thee to Repentance saith Paul consider 1. The presence of Mercy saves not but the acceptance the offer of a pardon delivers not the Malefactor but the receiving of it only the embracing makes us happy mercy proves not mercy but by acceptance the contempt of it strangly alters it into Justice 2. The despising of mercy leaves without all excuse what hast thou to urge against God who could not urge and fasten his mercy on thy soul yes thou wouldst have a licence but not a pardon I know thou warmest thy soul with the sound of mercy not to abate but to encourage thy sinfull appetite Why dost thou not break thy arm because there is a skilfull Chirurgion or fall into the strongest diseases because there is a skilfull Physitian 3. Continuance in sin and efficacy of Mercy are inconsistent thou through thy impenitent heart in stead of mercy treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. Now that which I would perswade you too is to be wise for Get your sins to be forgiven your souls and to get your sins to be forgiven and pardoned If a company of sick men did hear of an able Physitian that could and would heal them who would not be carried to him or what Malefactor is there so out-ragiously mad but that would make out to the King if he were assured that the King would pardon him Two things only I will propound Motives and Means 1. The Motives to stir us up to get our sins forgiven are these Motives 1. We are in such a case that we need pardon yea that pardon We need pa●don should be multiplied unto us Indeed were we not sinners then we should need no forgiveness or could we of our selves make or exact satisfaction to divine Justice then might we stand off from mercy but alas we are sinners by nature and by life all our dayes are days of sin the hairs are not more on our heads then the number of our sins are on our consciences they are so many that who can tell how often he offendeth therefore we need mercy to forgive yea and we are without strength we can find strength to sin but who can discharge for those sins the price and ransom could never yet be found in any sinners
knowing how his actions were capital copies wrote in Text Letters And that the sinnings of great men are like the fallings of Cedars which bring downe with them to the ground many lower shrubs And that the sinnings of good men are easily snares whereby other men would encourage and deceive themselves 2. Such sinnings from him would be trophies to evil men His sins would be trophies to evil men There are three things which flash evil hearts One is the accomplishing of their own projects and lusts Another is the distresses of the Church Aha so would we have it A third is the great falls of good men now like the dog they will bark and insult over the wounded Lion A good mans sins which are his wound and Gods dishonour is their day of mirth and sport I observe that there are three mouths which the higher sinnings of good men do open The mouth of God O how his word thunders his displeasure against the soul of such an one who is come so neere unto him and yet hath adventured thus to sin against him doest thou thus requite the Lord. The mouth of conscience if we do well and keep uprightly with God then the mouth of conscience yeelds words of oyle and peace it exceedingly excuseth comforteth acquitteth upholdeth c. but if we wickedly transgress and exceed infirmities O then the mouth of conscience proves like the mouth of the sword it speaks with sharpnesse and woundings ●nd terrible amazement c. breaks the bones of David Psal 51. makes him roar Psal 32. The mouth of evil men Now their voice is set on high the trumpet is set to their mouth O what Ragings Raylings Girdings Scoffings Obloquies and Blasphemies are instantly heaped upon Religion and Profession yea these are they this is their holiness this their profession this their niceness this the hypocrisie of them all Now perhaps this also might move David to pray to be kept back from presumptuous sins though not the immediate yet the colateral reason viz. because he might not give occasion to the Adversary that God might not suffer by him nor Religion by him that he might not sad the hearts of the righteous nor weaken the Glory of holiness nor stretch the mouths of them who can bless themselves in a course of vileness and yet curse and accuse the godly for particular facts only In respect of God 4. In respect of God Here also might David frame strong and singular reasons to be kept back from presumptuous sins I know there is nothing in God which a good heart might not urge as a sufficient 2. Reasons argument against any sin but I will contract my thoughts and matter 1. What God had been to him might cause him to pray What God hath been to him against presumptuous sins For his temporal kindness that was exceeding great he raised him from the crook to the Scepter from the Shepherds tent to the Kings Throne and now after all this to answer so great goodness with great sinfulness this would be a high degree of odious unthankfulness His spiritual kindness that was more then the former he did set his love upon him and made him a person after his own heart gave unto him his good Spirit of grace and joy comforted his soul in many adversities compassed him about with favour as with a shield heard his prayers granted him the desires of his soul O then how should David do such great wickedness and sin against his God! God forbid that David should put forth an hand to such an high kind of sinning who had received from the hand of his God such high kinds of mercy and goodness Mercy should make the greatest distance twixt us and sin and cause the purer walking twixt us and God What he was to God 2. What he was to God Why David was his servant see the Text and presumptuous sinnings are high oppositions to our service of God David was his child his son and presumptuous sinnings are great at least incongruities to the way of filial obedience Should such a man as I flee said Nehemiah so here should such a man as David one to whom God was so near one who was so near to God should he break out into the ways of Rebellions into the acts of an enemy into the paths of hostility not only sin which may befall the best but sin presumptuously which befals the worst nor only to be surprised by temptation but also to dare one in a sin by a proud presumption What for a child to take arms against his Father for a holy David to sin with so high a hand against so good a God and so professed a Father no marvel that he fears and prayes and that earnestly Lord Keep back thy servant from presumptuous sins No other might be expected from men professing themselves haters of God and Lover of sin but for a friend for a servant for a child how can my God take such vile dishonors from me and who will honour him if his own should adventure and presume thus to dis-glory his name and wrong his and their relation SECT IV. NOW I shall descend to the usefull Applications of this Vse 1 point unto our selves there are four general uses which may flow from this prayer of David 1. Of Instruction 2. Of Examination 3. Of Exhortation 4. Direction 1. For Instruction It may instruct and inform us in divers particulars viz. Instruction 1. To see our own danger as the prayers of holy men for good things should learn us faith and hope so their prayers See our own danger against great sins should teach us fear and watchfulness There is a story of an heathen man who prayed to Jupiter to be saved from his enemies one who heard him so petitioning willed him to mend his suit and to desire Jupiter to save him from his friend for he trusted them more and therefore they might do him most hurt I would add one thing more to have mended that petition also He should have prayed to have been saved from himself for there is more danger in our selves then in all enemies or friends O Brethren we carry about with us vile natures and treacherous hearts Even those abominations which sometimes we could have trembled at unto them will our wicked selves deliver our selves if God keep us not back Natural corruptions will bid fair fo● the foulest commissions and that the match is not finished and acted it is not because we want hearts but because God restrains and hinders My soul is even among Lyons said David In another case assuredly our soul dwels with such a nature as will not distinguish twixt small and great but is then most like it self when it is boyling in the vilest degrees of sinning The temptations cannot be so black and foul but our corrupt hearts would easily kindle by them and we should embrace them unless there were a God to stay and stop us