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A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

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2. Why all that love the Word they should have this Great and Pure Zeal I. What is true Zeal There is a carnal zeal and there 's a spiritual zeal First The carnal zeal to begin with that is Threefold 1. That which comes from an ill cause and produceth ill effects An ill cause as hatred of mens persons or envy at their Gifts and Excellencies or their success and happiness in the World Iam. 3. 14. If ye have bitter envying in your hearts it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if you have bitter zeal in your hearts There is a kind of bitter zeal and malignity at their excellency whether Gifts Graces Rank Dignity in the World And ver 16. he tells us this bitter zeal produceth confusion and every evil work To be consumed and eaten out with envy is little commendable This is not the zeal of the Text With this zeal were the chief Priests filled when they saw that the Gospel came into some reputation and that the people do what they could did haunt and frequent it we read Acts 5. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we render it they were filled with indignation it is in the Greek and in the Margin they were filled with zeal with this bitter zeal malignity envy indignation they would bestir themselves to suppress the growing Gospel by all the means that possibly they could 2. There 's an other sort of carnal zeal which hath an ill Object though it may be a good Cause from whence it proceeds such as an ignorant zeal which proceeds from some love to that which men call Religion but falsly and so the Apostle saith Rom. 10. 2. I bear them witness that they have a zeal of God but not according to knowledge and such a zeal had Paul when he was a Pharisee he gives us an account of it Gal. 1. 12 14. How that beyond measure I persecuted the Church of God being more exceedingly zealous of the Traditions of my Fathers Paul was a man that never acted against his Conscience no not when he was a Pharisee he still acted according to his Light but when he was blinded with Pharasaical prejudices he wasted the Church of God and was exceedingly zealous for a false Religion This is such a zeal as possibly might have a tolerable Cause but it had a bad Object a zeal about the Dictates of a deluded Conscience and this zeal perniciosior est quo flagrantior is the more pernicious the more earnest it is it hath often raised confusions in the Church when men are led with a blind zeal they think for God if they be under then they make divisions if they get a top then they are persecuting and oppressing this is the zeal of a deluded Conscience In short zeal must have a right object otherwise it may be great but cannot be Good Pure and Holy 3. An other false zeal is when it hath no ill Object but it exceeds in the measure and degree and is far beyond the weight of the thing that it is laid out upon this is a superstitious a tristing zeal which runs out to Externals and is altogether employed about lesser things of Religion as the Pharisees Math. 23. 23. That made a great business about a small matter Titheing Mint and Anise and Cummin but neglected weighty Duties Faith Judgment Righteousness and the great things of the Kingdom of God The Apostle tells us Rom. 14. 17. The Kingdom of God is not meat and drink in being of this party and that Many all their care and strength of their souls runs out in matters of less importance and keeping up a Party and Faction in Religion we should first make Conscience of principal matters Superstitious scupulosity is always damagefull like those that come into a shop to buy a penny-worth of a Commodity and steal a pounds-worth O! they have a great zeal for lesser things when it runs out mightily about outward things either for that or against that and in the mean time they cherish the World Pride Envy carnal evil Affections that are destructive to and the bane of Godliness Secondly There 's a spiritual holy zeal which we may describe 1. By it's Cause 2. By it's Object 3. By it's Effects 4. By it's Use as to publick Reformation 5. As to it's Use as to Christians private Exercises to carry on the spiritual Life with fervour warmth and vigour 1. I am to speak of the Cause of it The true Cause of holy zeal is Love to God and what belongs to God Zeal is ferventis amoris gradus a higher degree of Love it is the fervor of Divine Charity We should mark still what spirit enflames the zeal that we have Every man is eaten up with one kind of zeal or another The zeal of the World eats up many Ps. 127. 2. They bereave their souls of good and all for a little pelf they work in the Fires they load themselves with thick clay The zeal of the Flesh inflames many they are mad upon carnal delights can let go all considerations so as they may fulfil their lusts they are consumed with these kind of zeales Another spirit should be working in us a zeal for God and that comes from an entire Love to God When the soul doth heartily and earnestly love God above all then there 's a strong desire of promoting Gods glory and interest there should be that spirit which breathes in our zeal and with this zeal should we be eaten up and spent Now they that love God will love all them which belong to God Friends have all things Common so it is between us and God the injuries done to him will be as grievous to us as if they were done to our selves Psal. 69. 9. For the zeal of thine house hath eaten me up and the reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me and the glory that comes to them is as acceptable as if some great benefit had come to us Act 15. 3. Declaring the Conversion of the Gentiles and they caused great joy unto all the Brethren O! this is great joy to a gratious soul when Gods interest thrives in the world O! this is that they would willingly hear spoken of their hearts are upon it when Gods interest stands or falls such an earnest desire of the glory of God which is the highest degree and measure of Love to God! 2. Let us speak of the Object of zeal In three things Gods interest lies in the World viz. His Truth His Worship and His Servants Now it is not enough to have zeal that we do not oppose any of these but they must be tenderly regarded and looked after and we must be affected with these things as we would with our own concernments When wrongs are offered to any of these either to Gods Truth his Worship or his Servants they must go more nearly to our hearts then any personal injuries done to our selves What we cannot remedy we must mourn for All these
up our revenge and then there is no difference between us and them they sin and we sin Revenge and injury differ only in order Injury is first and Revenge is next Saith Lactantius If it be evil in another for thee to imitate him to be as mad as they break out in passion and virulency it is more evil in thy self because thou sinnest twice against a Rule and against an Example therefore God tries whether we will be passionate or patient The patience of his servants is mightily discovered by reproaches 1 Cor. 4. 12. Being reviled we bless being persecuted we suffer it being defamed we entreat There must be a season to try every grace and therefore now God trieth us whether we can with a meek humble submission yield up our selves or whether we are exasperated and drawn into bitterness of passion yea or no. 3. God tries our Uprightness Many are turned out of the way by reproaches The Devil works much upon stomach and spleen Tertullian being reproached by the Priests of Rome in revenge turns Montanist Now God tries us to see whether we will hold on our course The Moon shines and holds on its course though the Dogs bark So a child of God should hold on his way though men talk their fill In the Text though proud men reproached and contemned David yet all this did not unsettle him Some men can be Religious no longer than when they are counted to be religious but when their Secular Interest is in danger they fall off Thus when men injure them they do as it were take a revenge upon God himself Those carnal men that fall off from God are like pettish servants that run away from their Master when he strikes them a good servant will take a buffet patiently and go about his Masters work and if we were seasoned as we should be for God we would pass through evil report and good report 2 Cor. 6. 18. and still keep our integrity Thirdly God ordereth this grievous and sharp affliction to do you good or to better you Reproach is like Soap which seems to defile the clothes but it cleanseth them There is nothing so bad but we may make some good use of it a Christian may gain some advantage by it Dung seems to stain the grass but it makes the ground fruitful and to rise up at Spring with a fresh verdure Reproaches are a necessary help to a godly conversation to make us walk with more care and therefore this is another piece of holy revenge we should take upon them to make us walk more strictly and more watchfully the more they slander us and speak of us as evil doers the way is not to contend for esteem so much as to stop their mouths by a good apology Passionate returns will but encrease sin but a holy conversation will silence them USE 2. To them that either devife or receive reproaches both are very sinful First To you that devise them that speak reproachfully of others Consider 1. You hazard the repute of your own sincerity Jam. 1. 26. Whosoever seemeth religious and bridleth not his tongue but deceiveth his own heart this mans Religion is vain Hypocrites and men that put themselves into a garb of Religion and are all for censuring take a mighty freedom this way these men bewray the rottenness of their hearts Those that are so much abroad are seldom at home they do not enquire and look into their own hearts Alas in our own sight we should be the worst of men the children of God do ever thus speak of themselves as the least of Saints the greatest of sinners more brutish than any men of sinners whereof I am chief Why because we can know others only by ghess and imagination but they can speak of themselves out of inward feeling therefore we should have a deeper sense of our own condition But now a man that is much in judging and reproving others is seldom within for if he did but consider himself if he had but an account of his own failings he would not be so apt to blemish others It is a cheap zeal to let fly at the miscarriages and sins of others and to allow our own Consider thou hast enough to observe already in thy self 2. You rob them of the most precious treasure He that robs thee of thy name is the worst kind of thief Prov. 22. 1. A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches A man that is taken pilfring another mans goods he is ashamed when he is found so should a censurer you rob him of a more excellent treasure 3. You offend God and draw publick hatred It is the Devils work to be the accuser of the brethren Rev. 12. 10. The Devil doth not commit adultery doth not break the Sabbath nor dishonour Parents these are not Laws given to him If the Devil will bear false witness he is an accuser of the brethren it is the Devils proper sin and therefore Slanderer and Devil have one name Diabolus Object But must we in no case speak evil of another or may we not speak of another's sin in no case Sol. 1. It is a very hard matter to speak any evil of another without sin for if it be without cause then it is downright slander and is against truth if it be for a light and small cause then it is against Charity if it be for things indifferent or for lesser failings indiscretions or weaknesses still 't is against Charity Jam. 4. 11. Speak not evil one of another brethren It is worse in brethren Many take liberty to traduce Gods choice servants that are in difference For a Soldier to speak evil of Soldiers or a Scholar of Scholars is worse than for those that hate these Functions so for you Christians to speak evil one of another you gratifie the triumphs of Hell and bring a reproach upon the ways of Christ. In things doubtful judg the best in things hidden and secret we can take no cognizance when the fact is open we do not know the aim nor the intent of the heart It is the Devils work to judg thus Doth Iob serve God for nought when he could not traduce his action If the practice be open and publick we do not know what alleviating circumstances it may bear what grievous temptations they had or whether they have repented yea or no. The Devil is called a slanderer because he doth accuse the Saints It is too true many times what he accuseth them of I but he accuseth them when they are pardoned he rakes up the filth God hath covered he accuseth the brethren after repentance after they are acquitted by the Lords grace and so you may incur the like and therefore it 's a very hard matter to avoid sin in one way or other we shall dash upon the Command better let it alone 2. Speak not of him but to him and so change a sin into a duty I say when you turn
you may agree with them I answer In the general certainly the separation of one Christian from another is a great evil which should be carefully avoided and if walls of separation be set up by others yet we must do what in us lies to demolish them They do no service to Christ that make separations needlesly when as much as is possible there should be a union and coalition between Christians Now what shall we say to this Separation from Rome who were in the possession of a Christianity I tell you this Bug-bear needs not fright us out of the good way if we can but clear three things to you 1. That as to the rise it was neither unjust nor unnecessary 2. As to the manner of it it was not made rashly and lightly but as became them that had a serious sense of the Interest of Christ and of his Church in the world 3. As to the continuance of this Separation that if it were made upon good grounds and the same grounds still continue certainly we have no cause to revert and return back the Roman Synagogue not being grown better but much worse since the first breach If all these can be proved there is no reason to complain of our Separation First That this Separation was neither unjust nor unnecessary It is unjust if it be made without a cause it is unnecessary if it be made without a sufficient cause or such a cause as may warrant so great a breach in the Christian world Certain it is that the Schism lyeth not in the Separation but the Cause and so is not chargeable on those that make the Separation but on those that give the cause So that if we would examine whether the Separation be good I think we must examine the causes of it therefore let us a little consider this very thing Certainly the cause was not unjust there was a cause I shall shew that by and by And that it was not unnecessary without a sufficient cause and so no way culpable The business is Whether the Controversies be of such moment as that there should be such a breach among Christians that we and they should keep such a distance I speak only to the sufficiency of the cause the justness we shall see by and by Of what moment soever the Controversies were if the things that are taken to be errors be imposed as a condition of Communion a Christian cannot joyn himself with them Certainly it is no sin to abstain from the communion of any Church upon earth where the conditions of its communion are apparently unlawful and against conscience though it may be the matters in debate be not of great moment I only speak provisionally be they or be they not of moment yet if these be propounded as conditions of its communion for no man is necessitated to sin In some cases it is lawful to withdraw out of a place for fear of danger and infection as if a house or town be infected with the Pestilence it is but a necessary caution to look to our selves be-times and withdraw out of that house or town But now when no men are permitted to tarry but those that are infected with the disease the case is out of dispute the sound must be gone and withdraw from them by all the means they can Now such are the corruptions of Popery and the danger of seducement so manifest that little children are by all means to keep themselves from idols 1 Joh. 5. 21. We should be very cautious and wary of that communion wherein there is so much hazard of salvation if possibly we should keep our selves untainted but when we are bound to the belief practice profession of those errors there needs no more debate a Christian must be gone else he will sin against conscience Now this is the case clearly between them and us Suppose the corruptions were not great nor the errors damnable yet when the profession of them is required and the belief of them as certain truths is imposed we are to endure all manner of extremity rather than yield to them Therefore much more when it is easie to be proved that they are manifest and momentous corruptions Therefore certainly to leave the communion of the Popish Faction is but to return to our union and communion with Christ it can be no fault to leave them that left Christ and the ancient faith and Church The innocent husband that leaves the Adulterous wife is not to be blamed for she had first broken the bonds and violated the rights of the Conjugal relation Or a good Citizen and Soldier are not to be blamed in forsaking their Governour and Captain who first revolted from his allegiance to his Prince I and when he would engage them in the same Rebellion too Secondly As to the management of it or the manner how it was carried on It was not made rashly and lightly without trying all good means and offering to have their complaints debated in a free Council In the mean time continuing in their station and managing the cause of Christ with meek but yet zealous defences until they were driven thence by Antichristian fury for blowing the Trumpet and warning the Church of her danger from that corrupt party until persecuted by censures not only Ecclesiastical but Civil cast out of the Church put to death some for witnessing against others meerly for not owning and practising these corruptions and hunted out from their corners where they were willing to hide and worship God in secret with all rigor and tyranny driven first out of the Church then out of the world by fire and sword unless they would communicate with them in their sin thus were they used So that the Romanist cannot charge the Protestants for Schism for leaving their communion any more than a man that thrusteth another out of dores can be offended at his departure Yea when the Reformed did set up other Churches it was after all hopes of Reformation were lost and defeated And the Princes Magistrates Pastors and people were grown into a multitude and did in great numbers run to the banner which God had display'd because of his Truth and so could not in conscience and spiritual safety live without the means of grace and the benefit of Ordinances and Church-Societies lest they should be scattered as sheep without a shepherd and become a ready prey to Satan And then this Separation which was so necessary was carried on with love and pity and with great distinction between the corruptions from which they separated and the persons from whom they separated and they had the same affection to them and carried it all along just as those that are freed from Turkish slavery and have broke prison and invited the other Christian captives to second them it may be they have not the heart and courage to venture with them though they leave them fast in their enemies chains and will not return to their company they
Interests are in danger then they fall off questioning the ways of God and unsetling their hearts that is to take a Revenge upon God himself Hypocrites take pet like Servants that run away when their Master strikes them but a good Servant will take a buffet patiently and go about his work still So when the Lord buffets us by wicked men still we must follow our work and go on with God Thirdly The Lord doth it to do you good to make you better Reproaches are like Sope that seems to defile the Lynnen but it cleanseth it There is nothing so bad but we may make a good use of it and a Christian may gain some advantage by it Or as dung which seems to stain the grass but it makes the ground fruitful and the grass spring up with a fresher verdure So Reproaches are a necessary help to make us more humble heavenly to make us walk with a holy awe This holy Revenge we should take upon our Enemies to make us more strict and watchful The way is not to contend for esteem but to grow better more serious more faithful in our Lives for this is the way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2. 15. to muzzle the mouths of Adversaries as the mouth of a Dogg or wild Beast is Passionate returns do but increase sin but a holy conversation will silence all and therefore you should confute Calumnies you bind up their mouths thereby In short an innocent meek unblamable profitable Life will certainly have its due esteem in the consciences of men do what men can Therefore do you go on and be you the more strict and then these Reproaches will do you good This is the first Use Advice to us what to do in case we be reproached Use 2. To those that either devise or receive the Reproach both are very faulty and sinful 1. First you that devise Reproaches 1. You hazard the repute of your own Sincerity Iames 1. 16. If a man seems to be Religious and bridles not his tongue that mans Religion is in vain Such men that are seldom at home seldom look to the state of their own hearts Alas if they were acquainted with themselves or their own failings they would see themselves the worst People in the World Paul can see himself worse than Iudas I am the chief of Sinners because he hath a greater feeling of his own case Now he that is much in Judging is seldom within If a man had a Catalogue of his own faults he would not be so ready to blast others but say I am the chief of Sinners Hypocrites have nothing in them but empty shews and appearances It is a cheap zeal to let fly and yet this is the Religion of a great many at the miscarriages and faults of others No you should rather study your own 2. You rob them of a most precious Treasure For if that of Solomon be true Prov. 22. 1. A good Name is rather to be chosen then great Riches they are the worst thieves that rob a man of his good name A thief that pilfers and steals any thing from you he is ashamed when found and should not you be ashamed that rob a man of a more excellent Treasure 3. You offend God and draw publick hatred upon your selves For Censurers are always looked upon as the Pests of the World It is the Devils business his proper work Rev. 12. 10. He is called the accuser of the Brethren The Devil doth not commit Adulty break the Sabbath dishonour Parents but he will Slander and accuse and speak evil The other are not Cammandments suited to his Nature but this is a Commandment that may suit with Angelical Nature We are not to accuse another wrongfully Objection But must we in no case you will say speak evil of others I Answer Sol. 1. Be sure that it be not a downright Slander now it is hard to avoid that If the evil you speak be without cause then it is against truth If it be for a light and slender cause then it is against Charity if it be for things indifferent or for lesser failings the indiscretions and weaknesses of Christians all this is against that Charity that should pass especially between the Disciples of Christ Iames 4. 11. Speak not evil of one another Brethren It is worser in Christians always to be whispering and speaking evil one of another you gratifie the triumphs of hell In things doubtful you should judge the best in things hidden and secret we cannot take cognizance of them and we know not their aims and intents of the heart that is Gods work 1 Cor. 4. 5. and it is the Devils work if when the practice be good and fair to suspect them of Hypocrisie Besides too if there be some grievous fault you do not know what were their temptations how it may be alleviated by the temptation still you must consider your selves lest you also be tempted Gal. 6. 1. and you do not know whether they have repented of it The Devil is a Slanderer why He doth accuse the Children of God of what thy are guilty of and they give him too much cause to accuse them I but after Repentance after they are Justified by God and quitted by the Grace of God so he is a Slanderer So after they have repented you are insisting on those faults it is a great evil 2. Speak not of him but to him When men are absent it is not fit they should be judged for then they are not able to make a defence then it is back-biting When you thus speak of them you exchange a Duty for a sin Admonition for Reproach It is an unquestionable Duty to admonish one another but it is an unquestionable Sin to speak evil one of another 3. If of him it should be done with tenderness and grief When they are incorrigible when they are like to pervert others and dishonour the Gospel or for the manifest Glory of God O if we would but lay restraints upon our selves in this kind and never speak of others but when manifestly the glory of God calls for it And then it should be with Grief Phil. 3. 19. Of whom I have told you often and now weeping saith the Apostle There are a crew of Hereticks it is supposed he means the Gnosticks filthy and impure Persons that had debauched the Gospel to a licentious life yet the Apostle speaks of them weeping and therefore we should be very tender of speaking of them Not out of Idleness and for want of other talk that 's tattle forbidden in many places of Scripture Not out of Hatred and Revenge for that 's Malice there may be malice where the thing you speak is truth Not to please others that 's Flattery But if ever you speak of them and it should be with these cautions out of of zeal for the glory of God and the good of the Church If men did consider what restraints are laid upon them they would
Goodness and they are made to be remembred as it after followeth there he is ready to doe the like Works when his Church standeth in need thereof Now they must be sought out for there is more hid Treasure and Excellency in them then doth at first appear he that would reape the Use and Benefit of them should take Pleasure to search out matter of Praise for God and Trust for himself Of all other study this is the most worthy Exercise and Employment of Godly men to study and find out the Works of God in all their purposes and designs there is more pleasure in such Meditations then in all other the most sensual Divertisements 3. The End is to be strengthened and confirmed in the way of our Duty in Dependance upon God and Adherence to him or that Faith may be strengthened in a day of Affliction and our Hearts incouraged in cleaving to the Ways of God 1. Dependance upon God which implyeth a committing our selves to his Power a submitting our selves to his Will and a waiting his leisure all these are in Trust and all these are encouraged by remembring his Judgments of old 1. Committing our selves to his Power is Trust and Dependance Our God is able to deliver us from the fiery Furnace Dan. 3. 17. Rom. 4. 21. Being fully perswaded that what he had promised he was able also to perform Now this is abundantly seen in his Judgments of old Isai. 51. 9. Awake awake put on strength O arm of the Lord awake as in the ancient days in the generations of old Art not thou he which hath cut Rahab and wounded the Dragon which hast dried the Sea and the waters of the great deep If God will but take to himself his great Power and bestir himself as in ancient days what should a Believer fear 2. Submitting our selves to God's Will is a great Act of Dependance submitting before the Event Now how may a Believer acquiesce in God's Providence and injoy a quiet Repose of Heart he knoweth not what God will doe with him but this he knoweth he hath to doe with a good God who is not wont to forsake those that depend upon him he hath Wisedom and Goodness enough to deliver us or to make our Troubles profitable to us Now his Judgments of old do much help to breed this composedness of Mind Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee they that know any thing of God's wont and have learned from others or experimented themselves or by searching into the Records of Time have found with what Wisedom and Power Justice and Mercy God governeth the World will be firmly grounded in their Trust and Reliance on thee without applying themselves to any of the sinfull aides or policies of the World for succour or troubling themselves about success for God never forsook any Godly man in his Distress that by Prayer and Faith made his humble and constant Applications to him 3. If you take in the third thing tarrying or waiting God's leisure for he that believeth will not make haste Isai. 26. 16. God will tarry to try his People to observe his Enemies till their Sins are full and tarry to bring about his Providences in the best time 1 Pet. 5. 6. Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God that he may exalt you i. e. deliver you in due time It may be he will not at all afford temporal Deliverance but will refer it to the time when he will judge the world in Righteousness Acts 17. 31. Now what will relieve the Soul ingage it to waite his Judgments of old at the long-run the good Cause hath prevailed the suppressed Truth hath got up the buried Christ hath risen again and after labours and patience the Fruit sown hath been reaped therefore in due time he will look upon our Afflictions in the Sanctuary we understand the end of things The beginnings are troublesome but the end is Peace 2. Adherence to God this followeth necessarily from the former for Dependance begets Observance Till a Man trusts God he can never be true to him for the evil heart of unbelief will draw us from the living God Heb. 3. 12. but if we can depend upon him Temptations have lost their force The great Cause of all Defection is the desire of some present sensible Benefit and we cannot tarry God's leisure nor wait for his help in the way of our Duty Now if God's People of old have trusted and were never confounded it is a great engagement in the way of his Judgments to wait for him without miscarrying A Case of Conscience may be propounded How could David be comforted by God's Judgments for it seemeth a barbarous thing to delight in the destruction of any it is said Prov. 17. 5. He that is glad of calamities shall not be unpunished Answ. 1. It must be remembred that Judgment implies both parts of God's Righteous Dispensation the Deliverance of the Godly and the Punishment of the Wicked Now in the first sense there is no ground of scruple for it is said Psal. 94. 15. Iudgment shall return to Righteousness the sufferings of good men shall be turned into the greatest advantages as the context sheweth that God will not cast off his People but Judgment shall return unto Righteousness 2. Judgment as it signifieth Punishment of the Wicked may yet be a Comfort not as it importeth the Calamity of any but either 1. When the Wicked is punished the snare and allurement to Sin is taken away which is the Hope of Impunity for by their Punishments we see it is dangerous to sin against God Isai. 26. 9. When thy Iudgments are abroad in the Earth the Inhabitants of the world will learn Righteousness the Snare is removed from many a Soul 2. Their Derision and Mockage of Godliness ceaseth they do no longer vex and pierce the Souls of the Godly saying Aha aha Psal. 40. 15. It is as a wound to their heart when they say where is your God Psal. 42. 10. 3. The Impediments and Hindrances of worshipping and serving God are taken away when the Nettles are rooted up the Corn hath the more room to grow 4. Opportunity of molesting God's Servants is taken away and afflicting the Church by their Oppressions and so way is made for the enlarging of Christ's Kingdome 5. As God's Justice is manifested Prov. 11. 10. When it goeth well with the Righteous the City rejoyceth but when the Wicked perish there is shouting Psal. 52. 6. The Righteous also shall see and fear and shall laugh at him Loe this is the man that made not God his portion Rev. 18. 20. Rejoyce over Babylon ye holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you on her when the Word of God is fulfilled surely then we may rejoyce that his Justice and Truth are cleared SERMON LIX PSAL. CXIX 53. Horrour hath taken hold of me because
Psal. 11. 6. Upon the wicked he will rain Snares fire and brimstone and an horrible Tempest this shall be the portion of their Cup They may flourish for a time yet at length sudden terrible and irremediless Destruction shall be the portion of their Cup. God's Judgments are terrible and unavoidable both here and hereafter Eph. 5. 6. For these things cometh the wrath of God upon the Children of Disobedience Rom. 2. 4. Tribulation Wrath and Anguish upon the Soul of Man that doth evil Alas these things are slighted by wicked Men or else they would not venture as they do you cannot drive a dull Ass into the Fire that is kindled before him Prov. 1. 17. In vain is the Snare laid in the sight of any Bird and would a Reasonable Creature wilfully run into such a danger if he were sensible of it and venture upon so dreadfull threatnings if he did believe them no they think it is but a vain Scare-crow a deceitfull Terrour or a false flash of Fire and therefore embolden themselves in their Rebellion But God's People that know the certainty of these things they cannot but conceive a great horrour at it when they think of the end of these Men their Judgments in this World but especially their eternal Condemnation in the World to come Well then forsaking the Law despising the Precept and slighting the Sanction should be a matter of great Horrour to a tender and gracious Spirit 2. It argueth that they have a due sense of things though others have not 1. They have a due sense of the Evil of Sin Prov. 14. 9. Fools make a mock of sin They sport at it and jeast at it and count it nothing but gracious and tender Hearts have other Apprehensions they know that this is a Violation of the holy and righteous and good Law of God and that it will be bitter in the issue and that they which had pleasure in unrighteousness shall be damned They look upon it with sad Hearts though it be committed by others that the Wicked goe dancing to Hell and are angry with those who mourn for them and dislike that vain Course which they affect 2. They have a due sense of the Wrath of God the Prophet that threatned it saith That rottenness entred into his bones and his bowels quivered Hab. 3. 16. A Lyon trembleth to see a Dog beaten before him It is a trouble to the Godly to think of the horrible punishments of the Wicked which they dread not nor dream of But the Saints have a Reverence for their Fathers Anger Search the Scriptures and you shall find that the Godly are more troubled at God's Judgments then the Wicked themselves who are to feel them Dan. 4. 19. Daniel was astonished for an hour and his thoughts troubled him when he was to reveale God's Iudgments against Nebuchadnezzar So the Prophet Ier. 4. 19. My bowels my bowels I am pained at the very heart verse 22. But my people is foolish they are sottish Children they that brought the Evil upon themselves are senseless and stupid Psal. 90. 11. Who knows the power of thine Anger according to thy fear so is thy wrath Few lay to heart the terrible effects of God's heavy wrath but the Righteous doe they are truly affected with it and with the Cause of it which is Sin God's Wrath affects Men according to the Reverence and Fear wherewith they entertain it but to the Wicked it is but a vain and empty Terrour 3. The certainty of the Threatnings God's People see Wrath and Judgment in the face of Sin whereas those who are drowned in Sensuality and carnal Delights scoff at God's Menaces and jeast at his Judgments neither crediting the one nor expecting the other as if it were but a meer Mockery Isai. 5. 19. Come say they let him make speed and hasten his work that we may see it In their security they will believe nothing but what they feel 4. The Bane which cometh to Communities and Societies from the increase of the Wicked especially when their Wickedness groweth to an height that is when it is committed with boldness Isai. 3. 9. They declare their sin as Sodom they hide it not when Men have lost all shame and modesty and will not be restrained by any Law Surely if we know the evil of Sin the terribleness of God's Wrath believe the Truth of his Threatnings and then consider the danger that will come to our dearest Country we cannot but be greatly moved If a Man were sailing in a Bark and see it guided so that it must necessarily run against a Rock and suffer Shipwrack he would be sorry and deeply affected 3. It cometh from a good Cause 1. In the general it argueth a good Constitution of Soul 2 Pet. 2. 8. For that righteous man dwelling among them in seeing and hearing vexed his righteous Soul from day to day with their unlawfull deeds Passively he was vexed with the impurity of the Sodomites and actively he vexed himself So far as we are Carnal we are pleased with Sin so far as we are Spiritual we are vexed with it Isai. 63. 10. They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit The better any are the more affected with publick Sins and Judgments Christ weepeth over Ierusalem for their Impenitency and approaching Desolation Luke 19. 41 42. As he came near he beheld the City and wept over it saying If thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes This was in the midst of the Acclamations and Hosannahs of the Multitude when he was welcomed with a Triumph Paul telleth the Corinthians 2 Cor. 12. 21. I am afraid when I come among you my God will humble me and I shall bewaile many which have not repented of the Fornication Lasciviousness and uncleanness which they have committed The more holy any one is the more he is affected and struck at heart with the Sins of others 2. A deep Resentment of God's Dishonour When his Glory is obscured it is a wound to the Hearts of his Children As a Child cannot endure to hear or see his Father disgraced Surely God's Glory is dear to the Saints Psal. 69. 9. The Reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me Injuries done to God and Religion affect them no less nearly then Personal Injuries which are done to themselves So affectionately zealous are they for God's Honour which is obscured by the wickedness of the Wicked who forsake the perfect Righteous Law of God and usurping God's Authority make a new Law to themselves 3. Compassion to Men. Though they are Wicked men yet they are Men made after God's Image remotely capable to know and love God and live with him for ever whom they should otherwise embrace as Brethren to see them treasure up Wrath against the day of Wrath should be a grief and a trouble to us To think of the everlasting Destruction
's the reality Matth. 22. 7. They which were invited to the Wedding varnished their denial over with an excuse Delay is a denial for if they were willing there would be no excuse To be ridd of importunate and troublesome Creditors we promise them payment another time and we know our Estate will be more wasted by that time it is but to put them off So this delay and putting off God is but a shift Here 's the misery God always comes unseasonably to a carnal heart It was the Devils that said Matth. 8. 29. Art thou come to torment us before our time Good things are a torment to a carnal heart and they always come out of time Certainly that 's the best time when the word is prest upon the heart with evidence light and power and when God treats with thee about thine eternal peace Reason 6. There are very urgent reasons to quicken us to make has●…e 1. The state wherein we are at present is so bad and dangerous that we can never soon enough come out of it The state of a man in his Carnal condition is compared in Scripture to a Prison Rom. 11. 32. God hath concluded or shut them all up in unbelief And mark it is a Prison that is all on fire Oh when poor Captives are bolted and shut up in a flaming Prison how will they run hither and thither to get out So should we run and strive to get out of this flaming Prison You cannot be too soon out of the power of the Devil or from under the curse of the Law the danger of hell fire and the dominion of sin Matth. 3. 7. Who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come He doth not say to goe nor to run but to flee Fleeing from wrath to come that 's the truest motion And so Heb. 6. 18. They which had the avenger of blood at their heels fled for refuge to take hold of the hope set before them If there be poyson in our Bowels we think we can never soon enough cast it out If fire hath taken hold of a building we do not say we will quench it hereafter the next week or next moneth but think we can never soon enough quench it Or if there be a wound in the Body we do not let it alone till it 〈◊〉 and rankle Christians you may apply all this to the present case here the danger is greater There is no Poyson so deadly as Sin which hath infected all Man-kind no wound so dangerous for that will be the death of Body and Soul no fire so dreadfull as the wrath of God therefore we cannot soon enough come out of this condition 2. We cannot be happy soon enough for the state we make after is the arms of God the bosome of Iesus the hopes of Eternal Life we cannot soon enough get within the compass of such priviledges Oh shall Christ lie by as a dead Commodity or breaded ware It shews we know not the gift of God Iohn 4. If we had a due sense and value of his Excellency we would take the morning Market and let not Christ Iesus with all his benefits lie by as a Commodity that may be had at the last at any time of the day we would look upon him as the quickest ware in the Market and flock to him as Doves to the windows Isa. 6. You would force your way that you might get into his heart you would count all things but dross and dung that you might gain him It will be sweet to be incircled in the embraces of Iesus Christ to have his left hand under your head and his right hand to embrace you Cant. 2. 6. and will you delay when he stands offering himself and stretching out his hands all the day long to receive you SERMON LXVIII PSAL. CXIX 60. I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandments I Come now to the Application Use 1. Is to reprove the dallying with God which we are conscious to in the work of Conversion which is so common and natural to us We are apt to put off God from time to time from Child-hood to Youth from Youth to Mans-age from Mans-age to Old-age from Old-age to Death-bed and so the Devil steals away one hour after another till all time be past I shall 1 speak of the causes of this delay 2 represent the hainousness of it that you may not stroke this sin with a gentle censure and think lightly of the matter I. Of the causes of this delay 1. Unbelief or want of a due sense or sight of things to come If men were perswaded of Eternal Life and Eternal Death they would not stand hovering so long between Heaven and Hell but presently engage their hearts to draw nigh to God But we cannot see afar off 2 Pet. 1. 9. Nature is purblind to carnal hearts there 's a mist upon Eternity they have no prospective whereby to look into another World therefore it hath no influence upon them to quicken them to more speed and earnestness If we had a due sense of Eternal Death surely we would be sleeing from wrath to come no motion should be earnest and swift enough to get from such a danger If we had a due sense of Eternal Life we would be running to take hold of the hope that is before us Heb. 6. 18. 2. Security If men have a cold belief of Heaven and Hell if they take up the currant opinions of the Country yet they do not take it into their serious thoughts they put far away the evil day Amos 6. 3. Things at a distance do not startle us as a clap of Thunder afar off doth not fright us so much as when it is just over our heads in our own Zenith We look upon these things as to come so put off the thought of them Next to a want of a sound belief the want of a serious consideration is the cause why men dally with God If we had the same thoughts living and dying our motions would be more earnest and ready When Death and Eternity is near we are otherwise affected than when we look upon it as afar off One said of a zealous Preacher he Preacheth as if Death were at my back Oh could we look upon Death as at our back or heels if men did but consider that within a few dayes they must go to Heaven or Hell that there is but the slender thread of a frail Life upon which they depend that is soon fretted asunder they would not venture any longer to be out of a state of Grace nor dally with God But we think we may live long and time enough to repent by leisure we put far off the day of our change and so are undone by our own security 3. Aversness of heart from God That which makes us desirous to stay longer in a way of Sin doth indeed make us loth to turn at all and what 's that Obstinacy and unsubjection
stedfast in his Covenant Many have a little forced Religion in their Extremities but it weareth off with their Trouble Sin is but suspended for a while and the Devil chained up they are very good under the Rod they are frighted to it but after the Deliverance cometh the more prophane It is true many may begin with God in their Troubles and their Necessities drive them to the Throne of Grace and Christ had never heard of many if Feavours and Palsies and Possessions and Blindness Deafness and Dumbness had not brought them unto him thanks to the Disease but if a course of Godliness begin upon these occasions and continue afterwards God will accept it He is willing to receive us upon any terms Men will say you come to me in your Extremity but he doth not upbraid us provided we will come so as to abide with him and will not turn the back upon him when our turn is served if you doe so take heed God hath other Judgments to reach you as Iohn said Matth. 3. 11 12. He that cometh after me is mightier than I whose shoos I am not worthy to bear He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire Whose fan is in his hand and he will throughly purge his floor and gather his wheat into the garner but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire So that which cometh after is mightier than that which went before the last Judgment is the heaviest The Ax is laid to the root of the Tree therefore every Tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down and cast into the fire Matth. 3. 10. He will not onely lop off the Branches but strike at the Root as the Sodomites that escaped the Sword of Chedorlaomer perished by Fire from Heaven The Israelites that were not drowned in the Red Sea were stung to death by Fiery Serpents As if a man did flee from a Lyon and a Bear met him or went into the house and leaned his hand on the wall and a Serpent bit him Amos 5. 19. When you avoid one Judgment you may meet another and find a stroke where you think your selves most secure Use 1. Let us consider these things that we may profit by all the Chastenings of the Lord. It is now a time of Affliction both as to publick Judgments and as to the private Condition of many of the People of God we have been long straying from God from our Duty from one another it was high time for the Lord to take his Rod in his hand and to scourge us home again Upon these Three Nations there is somewhat of God's Three great Judgments War Pestilence and Famine they are all dreadfull The Pestilence is such a Judgment as turneth Populous Cities into Desers and Solitudes in a short time then one cannot help another Riches and Honour profit nothing then and Friends and Kinsfolks stand afar off Many die without any spiritual Helps In War what Destructions and Slaughters expence of Bloud and Treasure In Famine you feel your selves to die without a Disease know not where to have fuel to allay and feed the fire which Nature hath kindled in your Bodies But blessed be God all these are in moderation Pestilence doth not ragingly spread the War is at a distance the Famine onely a scarcity Before God stirreth up all his Wrath he observeth what we doe with these beginnings Besides the People of God are involved in an heap of Miseries on all hands the oppressed dejected Party burthened with jealousies and ready to be haled to Prison and put under restraint Holy men sometimes have personal Afflictions added to the publick Calamities Ieremy was cast into the Dungeon when the City was besieged The Chaff and Grain both are threshed together but the Grain is besides ground in the Mill and baked in the Oven Besides who thinks of his strayings and returning with a more severe Resolution to his Duty If we would profit by Afflictions we must avoid both the faulty extreams Heb. 12. 5. My Son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him Slighting and Fainting must be avoided 1. Let us not slight them When we bear them with a stupid senseless mind surely that hindereth all Profit None can endure to have their Anger despised no more than their Love a Father is displeased when his Child slights his Correction That we may not slight it let us consider 1. Their Authour God We think them fortuitous from chance but they do not rise out of the dust Job 5. 6. Whoever be the Instruments or whatever be the means the Wise God hath the whole ordering of it He is the first Cause He is to be sought to He is to be appeased if we would stop Evil at the Fountain head for all Creatures willingly or unwillingly obey him and are subject to his Empire and Government Amos 3. 6. Is there any evil in the City and I have not done it saith the Lord Isa. 45. 7. I form the Light and create Darkness I make Peace and create Evil I the Lord doe all these things Job 1. 21. The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away 2. The meritorious Cause is Sin Lamentat 3. 39. Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his Sin that first brought Mischief into the World and still continueth it God never afflicts without a cause either we need it or we deserve it Micah 7. 9. I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against him untill he plead my cause and execute Iudgment for me he will bring me forth to the light and I shall behold his Righteousness We should search for the particular Sins that provoke God to afflict us for while we onely speak of Sin in general we do but inveigh against a Notion and personate a Mourning but those we can charge upon our selves are most proper and powerfull to break the heart 3. The end is our Repentance and Amendment to correct Sin past or prevent Sin to come 1. For Correction to make us more penitent for Sin past We being in a lower sphere of understanding know things better by their Effects than their Nature Ier. 2. 19. Thine own wickedness shall correct thee and thy backslidings shall reprove thee know therefore and see that it is an evil and bitter thing that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee saith the Lord of Hosts Moral Evil is represented to us by natural Evil Pain sheweth what Sin is 2. For prevention of Sin for time to come The Smart should make us cautious and watchfull against Sin Ioshua 22. 17 18. Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us from which we are not cleansed to this day although there was a Plague in the Congregation of the Lord but that ye must turn away this day from following the Lord And it will be seeing ye rebel to
that are comfortable though they have things sparingly though they have of the meanest yet they have that which is good for them So Psalm 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold He may keep us low and bare feed us Cibo extemporali as Lactantius but that is good for us If it were good for us to have larger revenues and incomes we should not want them The true and absolute ground of all submission is to think that which God sendeth is good be it prosperity or adversity the having or wanting Children or other comforts 2. The next measure is this that Good is to be determined by its respect to the chief Good or true Happiness Now what is our chief Happiness but the Injoyment of God Our Happiness doth not consist in outward comforts Riches Health Honour civil Liberty or comfortable Relations as Husband Wife Children but in our Relation to and Acceptance with God other things are but additional Appendages to our Happiness Matth. 6. 33. Affliction taketh nothing from our Essential solid Happiness rather helpeth us in the Enjoyment of it as it increaseth Grace and Holiness and so we injoy God more surely That is Good that sets us nearer to God and that is Evil which separateth us from him therefore Sin is Evil because it maketh an estrangement between us and God Isa. 59. 2. But Affliction is good because many times it maketh us the more earnestly to seek after him Hosea 5. 16. In their Afflictions they will seek me right early Therefore every Condition is Good or Evil as it sets farther off or draweth us nearer to God that is Good that tendeth to make us better more like unto God capable of Communion with him conduceth to our everlasting Happiness So It is good that a man ●…ear the Yoke from his Touth Lam. 3. 27. that he be trained up under the Cross in a constant obedience to God and subjection to him and so be fitted to entertain Communion with him In Afflictions conduce to this end they are good for then they help us to ●…joy the chief Good 3. That Good is not always the Good of the flesh or the Good o●… outward prosperity and therefore the Good of our condition is not to be determin●… by the interest or the Flesh but the welfare of our Souls If God should bestow upon us so much of the Good of the outward and animal life as we desire we could not be said to be in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…tion if he should deny us Good Spiritual We should lose one half of the 〈◊〉 of the Co●…nt by doating upon and falling in love with the rest the flesh is import●… to be p●…sed but God will not serve our carnal turns We are more concerned as a Soul 〈◊〉 a Body Heb. 12. 10. He verily for our profit that we may be partakers of his holiness Certain it is God will chasten us for our Profit What do we call Profit the good things of this world the great Mammon which so many worship if we call it so God will not he meaneth to impart to us Spiritual and Divine Benefit which is a participation of his own Holiness And truly the People of God if they be in their right temper value themselves not by their outward Injoyments but their inward by their improvement of Grace not the injoyment of worldly Comforts 2 Cor. 4. 16. For this cause we faint not but though our outward m●…n perish our inward man is renewed day by day A discerning Christian puts more value upon Holiness wrought by Affliction than upon all his Comforts So that though Affliction be Evil in it self 't is good as sanctified 4. A particular Good must give way to a general Good and our personall benefit to the advancement of Christ's Kingdome The good of the Church must be preferred before our personal contentment Paul could want the Glory of Heaven for a while if his continuance in the Flesh were needfull for the Saints Phil. 7. 24. To abide in the Flesh is more needfull for you We must not so desire Good to our selves as to hinder the Good of others All Elements will act contrary to their particular for the conservation of the Universe That may be Good for the Glory of God which is not Good for our personal contentment and ease Now the Glory of God is our greatest Interest if it be for the Glory of God that I should be in pain bereft of my comforts my sanctified subjection to the will of God must say 't is Good Iohn 12. 27 28. there you have expressed the innocent inclination of Christ's humane Nature Father save me from this hour and the overrulling sense of his duty or the obligation of his office but for this cause came I to this hour We are often tossed and tumbled between inclination of Nature and conscience of Duty but in a gracious Heart the sense of our duty and the desire of glorifying God should prevail above the desire of our own Comfort Ease and Safety and Welfare Nature would be rid of trouble but grace submits all our interests to God's honour which should be dearer to us than any thing else 5. This Good is not to be determined by present feeling but by the Judgment of Faith Affliction for the present is not pleasant to natural sense nor for the present is the fruit evident to spiritual sense but 't is good because in the issue it turneth to good Rom. 8. 28. All things work together for good While God is striking we feel the grief and the Cross is tedious but when we see the end we acknowledge 't is good to be afflicted Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous but afterwards it yieldeth the peaceable fruits of righteousness A good present is the cause of joy and an evil present is the cause of sorrow but there are two terms of abatement the sorrow is from the present sense and the conceit of the sufferer When we are but newly under the Affliction we feel the smart but do not presently find the benefit but within a while especially in the review 't is Good for me 't is matter of Faith under the Affliction 't is matter of sense after it Good Physick must have time to work that which is not good may be good though it be not good in its nature 't is good in its seasonable use and though for the present we see it not we shall see it Therefore Good is not to be determined by seeling but by Faith The Rod is a sore thing for the present but the bitter root will yield sweet fruit If we come to a person under the Cross and ask him what is it good to feel the lashes of God's correcting Hand to be kept poor and sickly exercised with Losses and Reproaches to part with Friends and Relations to lose a beloved Child sense will complain But this poor Creature after he hath been Exercised and Mortified and gotten
for ever I shall illustrate this Proposition by these Considerations 1. That God's Children are sometimes under deadness 2. That in such deadness the Word of God is the onely means to quicken them 3. Though the Word be quick and lively and powerful yet it is God that must bless it that must make it a support to the Soul 4. That whenever we have received these Comforts Quicknings and Supports from him they should ever be recorded and treasured up in the Registers of a thankful memory for the great uses of Christianity I. First God's Children are under deadness sometimes which hapneth to them for many causes 1. By reason of some Sin committed and not repented of or not fully repented of God smites them with deadness and hardness of heart and the spiritual life for awhile is greatly obstructed and impaired that it cannot discover itself and they have not those lively influences of grace as formerly Thus it was with David when he had strayed so greatly from God and begs God not to cast him off Psal. 51. 11. Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me As a wound in the body lets out the life blood and the spirits so these grievous sins are as a wound in the soul Sin against the conscience of a renewed man defaceth the work of the holy Spirit so that for a while he seems to be shut out from God's favor and his gracious abilitie are lessened and impaired he is like a wounded man till he be cured and made whole again The Spirit being grieved and resisted withdraws and the strength of the Soul is wasted and therefore be very tender stand in awe not only of greater but smaller sins 2. By reason of some good omitted especially neglect of the means whereby we may be kept alive fresh and lively in God's service Lazy fits of indisposition and omissions of duty do more frequently steal in upon Believers than positive out-breakings and commissions of sin and they are more ready to please themselves in them and lie still under them and so by this means contract much deadness of heart As a Lute that is not play'd upon but hangs by the wall and not used it soon grows out of keller for want of use so if we do not diligently and constantly exercise our selves in godliness our hearts grow dead and vain It is the complaint of the Church Isa. 64. 7. There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee If we do not stir up our selves to keep on a constant commerce with God and respect to God alas deadness creeps upon the heart unawares and we are commanded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1. 6. To stir up the gift of God which is in us Surely a sloathful servant will soon become an evil servant Mat. 25. 26. Thou evil and sloathful servant Therefore our sinful sluggishness is one cause of our deadness for he that doth not trade with his Talents will necessarily become poor and if we do not continue this holy attendance upon God the heart suffers loss 1 Thess. 5. 19 20. Despise not prophesie quench not the Spirit The coupling of these two things together shews that if we despise Prophesie we quench the Spirit as fire goes out not only by pouring on water but by not stirring and blowing it up To expect help from God when we are sluggish is to tempt Christ and put him still upon a miraculous way to heal and cure our distempers Who will bring bread and meat to a Sluggard's Bed who will not arise to labor for it o●… will not rise at least to fetch it Therefore if we will not attend upon God in the means of grace he will not bring us that help comfort and supply that otherwise we might have God worketh but so that we work also 2 Phil. 12. 13. Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling For it is God that worketh c. God's working is not a ground of laziness but for more strict observance Since all depends upon God therefore take heed you do not offend God and provoke him to suspend his grace We must not lie upon a Bed of ease and cry Christ must do all for this is to abuse the power of grace to laziness It is notable that God bids his people do that which he promiseth to give them Psal. 31. 24. Psal. 27. 14. Be of good courage and he shall strengthen your heart As if he had said strengthen thine heart and he will strengthen thy heart The courage of Faith is both commanded and promised why God by this would shew how we should shake our selves out of our laziness and idleness that though God gives us grace and power yet he will have us to work as a Father that lifts up his childs arm to a burden and bids him lift it up Usually we complain of deadness with a reflection upon God he quickens the dead and therefore I am dead ay but what hast thou done to quicken thy self for grace was never intended that we might be idle you must complain of your selves as the moral faulty cause God is the efficient cause you do not meditate pray draw life out of the precious promises when the Spouse sleeps and keeps her Bed then Christ withdraws Cant. 5. 6. 3. Another cause is unthankfulness for Benefits received especially spiritual Benefits for God loves to have his grace acknowledged He stops his hand and suspends the influences of his grace when the creature doth not acknowledge his bounty Col. 2. 7. Be stablished and rooted in the faith abounding therein with thanksgiving The way to grow in Faith and get by Faith is to be thankful for what we have received that 's an effectual means both to keep it and to get more Therefore if we be always querulous and do not give thanks for the goodness of God to us for what he hath already vouchsafed to us in Christ no wonder that deadness and discouragement creeps upon our hearts 4. Pride in Gifts for we are told Iam. 4. 6. God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble The Garland we put on our own heads soon withers and those Gifts which we are pusst up with are presently blasted and have deadness upon them for he will teach us to ascribe all to himself 5. Some great and heavy Troubles We read ver 107. of this Psalm I am afflicted very much quicken me O Lord according unto thy Word O! when we are afflicted sore there 's a deadness upon the heart the spiritual life clogged with what alacrity did they go about good things before but then there 's a damp worldly sorrow deadens the spirit as godly sorrow quickens it and is a means to keep us alive to God 6. Another cause is Carnal liberty or intermedling with worldly vanities So much we may learn from that Prayer Psal. 119. 37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken thou
first declinings are a cause of all the rest remitting your watch and spiritual fervor by degrees you do not walk with such a strait foot he that looketh to the House to keep it tight and in constant repair prevents the fall of it 2. If through our infirmity we miscarry at any time we must not persist in a wrong course but reclaim speedily not depart wickedly Psal. 18. 21. not lie in the dirt when we have caught a fall There is a departing out of infirmity and a departing wickedly A Candle sucketh light if presently kindled again the longer we lie in our sins the worse the more care and the more speedy the more likely to succeed when there is any breach between us and God not lie in it 2dly As to publick Actions We live in changeable times but it is well that we have a sure Rule this may stablish your hearts if governed by sense and interest with what a gracious face shall we appear to the world Though you meet with troubles for being exact and punctual as to principles of Conscience and many disappointments from God yet in the issue that will be found to be the best course for you and yours Now when you see your duty for which you must consult both with Word and Spirit take heed of two things 1. Unbelief Heb. 3. 12. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God The cause of Apostasie is Unbelief they do not look upon God's directions as judgments Men that look to the present face of things cannot see things to come and so miscarry Hezekiah in the midst of dangers and difficulties was steddy to God 2 Kings 18. 5 6. He trusted in the Lord God of Israel He clave to the Lord and departed not from following him but kept his commandments which the Lord commanded Moses Every duty hath a sanction invested with promises and threatnings therefore as there needeth obedience to make conscience of the precept so faith to believe the sanction which doth enliven the duty and keep our hearts under the awe of it 2. Mortification For till there be an indifferency to all events in temporal things we shall ever be departing and turning off from God sometimes allured out of our obedience sometimes afrighted out of it therefore till dead to worldly accidents and interests we are easily turned out of the way Heb. 12. 13. Lest that which is lame be turned out of the way That which is lame feeble and fearful good men may be carried away thus as Peter Too weak and unconstant are the best of men the least blast of temptation will make them leave off the course of well-doing and without respect had to conscience or credit openly to desert it For fear of man's offence Peter slippeth from his duty fear of losing applause or incurring hatred with men maketh us venture on God's dishonour unmortifi'd lusts make us more tender of our selves than of God Second Point That Divine Teaching causeth Constancy For therefore David saith I departed not for thou hast taught me Here 1. What it is to be taught of God 't is often spoken of in Scripture Isa. 54. 13. All thy children shall be taught of the Lord. John 6. 45. All taught of God Now God teacheth outwardly by his Word but inwardly by his Spirit these two must not be severed Our hearing is necessary Eph. 4. 21. If so be ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Iesus The ordinary means of hearing him preached and set forth in the Gospel and publick Ministry and by that means doth Christ make use of it to teach us by his Spirit so Iohn 6. 45. Heard and learned of the Father it doth not seclude a teaching Ministry in the Gospel but it is said 1 Thes. 4. 9. Ye your selves are taught of God to love one another And 1 Iohn 2. 27. But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lye and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him It is a Rhetorical insinuation the Negative to be understood comparatively man 's teaching is nothing to what you have already by the Spirit On the other side much more doth it not exclude the Spirit upon whom the efficacy dependeth God teacheth by men but the effect is from his grace Mark 16. 20. They went forth preaching the Word the Lord working with them 1 Cor. 3. 6. Paul may plant and Apollo water but God giveth the increase The internal efficacy working by external means Docet Spiritus Sanctus sed per verbum saith Ferus docent Apostoli sed per co-operationem Spiritus Sancti God worketh in and by the means 2. Inwardly God teacheth two ways 1. By common Illumination 2. Special Operation 1. Common Illumination barely enlightning the mind to know or understand what he propoundeth by his Messengers so Rom. 1. 20. God shewed it to the Heathen For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead so that they are without excuse But then 2dly By way of special Operation effectually inclining the will to embrace and prosecute duties so known Ier. 31. 33. I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts This way of teaching is always effectual and persuasive now in this sense they are taught of God that they do not only get an ear to hear but an heart to understand learn and practise Secondly Why this teaching is the ground of constancy 1. They that are thus taught of God see things more clearly than others do God is the most excellent Teacher One man seeth a thing by candle-light another by day-light he seeth most clearly that seeth by noon-day The light of the Spirit doth clearly manifest things both Object and Faculty The Unction teacheth us all things 1 Iohn 2. 20. 2 Cor. 3. 18. A distinct clear abiding light Carnal men are blind 2 Pet. 1. 9. How sharp sighted soever in other things yet blind they do not see so as to affect their hearts 2. They know things more surely and with certainty of demonstration whereas others have but dubious conjectures and loose and wavering opinions about the things of God Iohn 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God John 17. 8. Known surely that I came out from thee The many temptations and assaults we meet with need such a certain apprehension 3. This teaching is so efficacious and powerful as that the effect followeth Psal. 86. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord I will walk in thy truth 1 Cor. 2. 4. 'T is a lovely teaching causing us to cleave to what is taught 4. God reneweth this
practical esteem when they can forfeit this taste for every trifle and flesh pleasing vanity or when they carelesly look after him are indifferent as to communion with God and think it not much whether they are accepted of God yea or no or manifest himself to you in Christ when the comforts of the Spirit are things you can spare and the consolations of God seem to be small it is all one to you whether you have experiences from God in duty or no your souls are satisfied this is a cause of decaying Then negligence in duties pray lazily hear carelesly not meditate often Inordinate savor of carnal pleasure that 's another cause What 's the reason the Temporary seems to be so affected he loseth his taste altogether carnal things have the first possession of his heart and being confirmed there by long use and custom being so suitable to us and so long rooted in us and we have such a vanishing glance of things to come this will work out that taste the love the sense we have of better things godly men when they turn out to the contentments of the flesh they lose their taste it becomes dead This is a considerable loss as to the vitality of your graces for without a taste of good or evil we shall neither eschew the evil nor follow that which is good with that serious constancy and diligence that is necessary A man that hath tasted of the poyson of Asps and the bitterness of the gall and wormwood that is ●…n sin will be afraid of it Rom. 6. 21. So a man that hath tasted of the sweetness of communion with God in Christ he is quickned and carried on with life courage and constancy That 's a dreadful place Heb. 6. 4 5. the loss of their taste is a degree to final Apostasie O! how many lose their taste their relish of Christ the good Word of God the powers of the life to come and are fallen fouly some forward into error some backward into a licentious course so that it is impossible to recover themselves by repentance SERMON CX PSAL. CXIX VER 104. Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way IN the former Verse the Man of God had spoken of the pleasure that was to be had by the Word now of the profit of it There is a great deal of pleasure to spiritual sense if we could once get our appetite we should find a world of sweetness in it and there is as much profit as pleasure As the pleasure is spiritual so also is the profit to be measured by spiritual considerations To escape the snares of the Devil and the dangers that way-lay us in our passage to Heaven is a great advantage Now the Word doth not only warn us of our danger but where it is received in the love of it breedeth a hatred of all these things that may lead us into it Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way In which Sentence the Prophet seems to invert the order set down ver 101. he had said I refrained my feet from every evil way that I might keep thy Word Where the avoiding of evil is made the means of profiting by the Word Here his profiting by the Word is made the cause of avoiding evil In the one Verse you have an account of his beginning with God in the other of his progress In this Verse here is 1. The Benefit he received by the Word and that is Sound and saving knowledge 2. The Fruit and Effect which this knowledge produceth in his heart Therefore I hate every false way Mark first The firmness of this Effect I hate He doth not say I abstain but I hate Secondly The Note of Universality Every Thirdly The Object false way it is not said evil way but false way or as it is in the original every path of lying and falshood Falshood is either in point of opinion or practice If you take it in the first sense for falshood in opinion or error in judgment or false doctrine or false worship this sentence holds good Those that get understanding by the Word are establish'd against Error and not only establish'd against Error or against the embracing or profession of it but they hate it 1. They are established All Error cometh from Ignorance or else Judicial Blindness First From Ignorance or unacquaintedness with the Word of God so Christ said to the Sadduces Te do err not knowing the Scriptures Mat. 22. 29. When Men study not the Word which is the Rule of Truth no wonder if they lie open to every fancy they take up things hand over head and by a fond credulity are led away by every suggestion presented to them So it is said 2 Pet. 3. 10. That the unstable and unlearned wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction By the unlearned is meant not those that are unskilful in Humane Literature though that be a great help but those that are unskilful in the Word of Righteousness poor deluded souls that lie under a great uncertainty Secondly Judicial Blindness For men that have great parts and a presumption of their own wit are given up to be blinded by their own Lusts and though they know the Scriptures yet they wrest them to speak according to the sense of their carnal interest 1 Thes. 2. 12. And so they see not what they see being given up to the witchery and inchantment of Error Gal. 3. 1. O foolish Galatians who hath bewitched you So that all false ways proceed from the want of reason and the pride of reason The one is the cause of the Simple's erring who believeth every word The other of those that are knowing and are otherwise of great parts but they make their wit their Idol and so would be wise above the Scriptures or else are sway'd by their own Lusts they do not fix themselves in the power love and practice of Truths revealed in the Scriptures and so are given up to hellish delusions Now in this sense I might speak with great profit of these words especially now when so many Errors are broached and all the Errors of Christianity come a breast to assault it at once and such changeable Times as produce several Interests whereby men are blinded and such Levity in the Professors of Religion Why then study the Word with a teachable heart that is renouncing your own wit and giving up your selves to God's direction and practise what is plain without being sway'd with the profits and pleasures of the world and you may come to know what is the mind of God Men think all is uncertain in Religion and are apt to say with Pilate What is truth John 18. 38. No the Scriptures are not obscure but our hearts are dark and blind with worldly Lusts otherwise The counsel is plain and you might say with David Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way 1. Where the Spirit
for such a time Heb. 4 16. when need comes then it 's a time to improve our interest to put promises in suit when God seems to be an Enemy to us when to appearance he executes the curse of the Old Covenant O then we should work through all discouragements then we should hold God to his second Grant and Charter and come to his Throne of Grace and keep him there For the Reasons 1 God is the Party with whom we have to do whence soever the trouble doth arise there 's his hand and his counsel in it therefore it is best dealing with him about it in all afflictions publick or private Amos 3. 16. Is there evil in the City and the Lord hath not done it Let Men but awaken their Reason and Conscience who is it that is at the upper end of Causes that casts our lot upon such troublesom and distracted times So in private afflictions David owned God's hand Shimei had mocked him but he looks higher the ●…ord hath bid him curse So Iob he doth not say the Caldean and Sabean hath taken away but the Lord hath taken Iob 1. 21. Afflictions have a higher cause than Men ordinarily look at they do not come out of the dust but come from God See what inference Eliphaz draws from this principle Iob 5. 8. I would seek unto God and unto God would I commit my cause That is I would go and deal with him about it 't was Eliphaz's advice to Iob and it is seasonable to us all 2 It is God onely that can help us and relieve us either by giving support under the trouble or removing it from us so saith David Psal. 57. 2. I will cry unto God most high unto God that performeth all things for me A Believer looks for all things from God when all things go well with him God is his best Friend when all things go ill with him God is his onely Friend he runs to none so often as to God Now upon these Principles we go to God but for what end let us see what we go to God for 1. That we may know his mind in all his Providences The affliction hath some errand and message to us something to deliver us from God now we need to ask of God to know his mind Micah 6. 9. Hear the rod and who hath appointed it We should not only be sensible of the smart but look to the cause therefore if we would know the cause let us go and expostulate with God about it As Ioab when Absalom set his Corn field on fire he sent for him once and twice but he comes not until he sets his Corn-field on fire and then he comes and expostulates with him Who hath done this 2 Sam. 14. 30 31. So when we make bold and will not come to God nor take notice of his messages God comes and lets out his wrath upon our comforts and conveniences now let us deal with God about it Wherefore is all this 2. That we may have strength to bear it Alas we can bear or do little of our selves for that doing refers to bearing Phil. 4. 13. I can do all things through Christ that strengthneth me That is I can suffer want need hunger thirst nakedness and run through all conditions through Christ that strengthneth me Now you must ask it of God Iam. 1. 5 If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God It is wisdom to bear affliction if he would wisely carry himself under the Rod that he may not discover his folly he must ask this strength and grace of God 3. Wisdom to improve our chastisement that we may have the benefit and fruit of them Isa. 48. 17. I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit That is to profit by afflictions to reap the fruit of them So Iob 33. 16. He openeth the ears of men and sealeth their instruction God by a powerful work upon the heart impresseth their duty upon them that they may see wherefore it is that he hath afflicted them 4. We go to God for deliverance and freedom from the trouble Psal. 34. 19. Many are the troubles of the righteous but out of them all the Lord will deliver them It is God's Prerogative to set us free We break Prison when we attempt to escape meerly by our own means therefore either we shall have no deliverance or no kindly one God hath deliver'd doth deliver and we trust will deliver This must be sought out of God God helping together with your prayers 2 Cor. 1. 10 11. Prayer must fetch it out from God or it is no kindly deliverance Well then in our affliction we need to be often with God SERMON CXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 107. Quicken me O Lord according to thy Word Use 1. TO reprove the stupidness and carelesness of them that neglect God in their troubles Dan. 9. 13. All this evil is come upon us yet made we not our prayer before the Lord our God A very sensless slight spirit that when they are under the blows of God's heavy hand they will not be much in calling upon God this is contrary to God's injunction who expects now with earnestness they will seek him God reckons upon it he could not hear from them before but now they 'll pray hard and will make up their former negligence when God sends a Tempest after you as on Ionah yet will you keep off from him It is contrary to the practice of the Saints in their chastisements troubles and afflictions they are much with God opening their hearts to him Nay it is worse than Hypocrites for they will have their pangs of devotion at such a time Iob 27. 10 11. In short you lose the comfort of your affliction Seasons of affliction are happy seasons if they prove praying seasons when they bring you nearer to God it is a sign God is not wholly gone but hath left somewhat behind him when the heart is drawn into him This is the blessing of every condition when it brings God nearer to you and you are more acquainted with him than before Use 2. Then it takes off the discouragements of poor disconsolate ones who misexpound his Providence when they think afflictions put us from God rather than call us to him O no! it is not to drive you from him but to draw you to him Do not think God hath no mercy for thee because he leaves thee to such pressures wants and crosses This is the way to acquaint your selves with God yea though you have been hitherto strangers to him he hath invited you to call upon him in time of trouble he is willing to have you upon any terms A Man will say you come to me in your necessities God delights to hear from you and is glad any occasion will bring you into his presence and therefore be much with God Secondly I observe when this affliction was sore and pressing yet then he hath a heart to pray
before them all saying I know not the man Or when we take any sinful course for temporal safety as when David seigned himself mad before Achish 1 Sam. 21. 13. Or when our spirits are fill'd with passion against the instruments of our trouble and with uncomely heats as Peter drew a Sword in a rash zeal and had no thanks for it but a Rebuke from Christ. Or when we suffer in a heartless and uncomfortless manner as God's children sometimes are in dejections of spirit David took notice of his drooping and disconsolateness Psal. 42. 5. when he flitted up and down in the Wilderness and pursu'd with Saul's Army he had his droopings and discomforts in these Cases we forget the Word of God 2dly To press you to courage and constancy in a time of danger to endure all Extremities rather than do any thing against the Word of God Here I shall inquire 1. What is this Christian Courage There is Military Valor and Christian Valor The one consists in doing the other in suffering great things Peter at Christ's death had more of the Military Valor and Fierceness than of the Passive Valor for he that could venture on a Band of Men was foiled by a Damsels question The one dependeth on hastiness of temper greatness of blood and spirits the other upon Faith and submission of God's Will Acts 7. 55. He being full of the Holy Ghost look'd up stedfastly into heaven and saw the glory of God and Iesus standing at the right hand of God It is spoken when the People gnashed on him with their teeth then full of the Holy Ghost There is the Habit of Fortitude and the Act of it when led on There is a great deal of difference between the courage of wicked men and the faith and fortitude of good Christians We see rude men are undaunted in the face of danger but the fortitude of Christians consisteth in lifting up their eyes and hearts to Heaven others not for as soon as they think of God their courage faileth the more brave the more they shut out the thought of divine things all sense of God and immortality 1 Cor. 15. 32. Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dye It is a brutish fury inflam'd by Wine stir'd up by Trumpets and Drums not stir'd up by the consolations of God or remembrance of his Covenant then they are dejected Rev. 6. 15 16 17. 2dly To remove such Objections as may hinder your Courage and Constancy 1. It is a sore temptation to keep our service but we must stand to God's Providence to honour him by service or by suffering as he shall think good We are to honour God in his own way we are not to stretch Conscience in the least degree to continue it God hath no need of thy sin when God hath a mind to lay you aside submit 2. The smalness of the difference is another Objection If it were to turn Turk or Heathen or Papist men will say They would not do so and so God standeth upon every peek of his word every dust of truth is precious 3. Another Objection is this We shall be interpreted to hinder the Publick Peace I answer If it be possible as much as lieth in you live peaceably with all men Rom. 12. 18. But be sure not to betray the Cause of God nor lose the Interest of Christ that is not possible which is not lawful in a moral sense 4. Another Objection is That we shall be accounted peevish rash stubborn I answer We must be led to credit There is a difference between men stubborn and obstinate and zealous Many may sacrifice a stout body to a stubborn mind but be couragious and constant in the service of God 3dly What is necessary to this well-temper'd Courage that we may suffer not out of humour but out of conscience towards God not because formerly engag'd by profession or out of a desire of a name and esteem among Religious persons but out of Obedience to God who commandeth us to chuse afflictions rather than sin To this Resolution there is necessary 1. An heart weaned from the World Mat. 6. 24. otherwise a man will act very uncertainly and his zeal for God be very uneven 2. An heart intirely devoted to God Every one that cometh to Christ must be thus resolved Luke 14. 26. 3. An heart purged from sin or else our zeal is not uniform besides that our lusts will weaken our courage A carnal person suffering in a good cause is of no account with God The Priests were to search the Burnt offering if sound or had any defect or blemish upon them He that keepeth the Commandments is best able to suffer for them Mat. 5. 10. Blessed are they that suffer for righteousness sake A Martyr must have all the precedent graces 4. An heart that lieth under a deep sense of Eternity and things to come 1 Ioh. 5. 4. This is the victory we have over the world even our faith Not any looking backward but forward SERMON CXX On the Fifth of NOVEMBER PSAL. CXIX VER 110. The wicked have laid a snare for me yet I erred not from thy precepts HEre is the second Assault made upon David's Integrity the secret snares laid for him The Enemies of God's People do not always go to work in the way of open Persecution and directly for Righteousness sake but then they lay snares what they cannot do by open force they seek to do by fraud Many that have stood out with courage against the shock of violence have been taken in a snare as the Prophet that resisted the King was enticed by the blandishments of the old Prophet 1 Kings 13. Persecution is a more gross way and liable to Exception and therefore they must go secretly to work Sometimes this life is a continued temptation and a Christian that walketh in the world walketh in the midst of snares set for him by his Enemies bodily and spiritual The Devil is the great Snare-layer and wicked men learn it of him The wicked have laid a snare for me c. In the words observe 1. David's Temptation A snare laid for him 2. The Persons who manag'd the Temptation The wicked 3. The Success and Issue Tet I erred not from thy precepts Doct. The Godly have often Snares laid for them not only by Satan but by wicked men Now Snares are to entice or endanger or of a mixt nature 1. Snares to entice them from their Duty Thus the blandishments of the whorish Woman are call'd a snare Prov. 7. 23. As the Bird hasteth unto the snare and knoweth not that 't is for his life Of this nature are crafty Insinuations Baits of Preferment Profit Pleasure or any carnal advantage to pervert our Judgments and draw us off from our Duty 2. Snares to endanger their safety clog'd with some spightful condition to entrap others or when there is a Plot-laid to endanger others as Ieremy complaineth Jer. 18. 22. They have digged
Conference is empty unsavory barren may much divert our hearts from Heaven and do us a great deal of mischief The Apostle tells us Heb. 10. 24. we should consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works Our dulness and backwardness is such that we need the most powerful helps 3. Of all evil Company the Company of Seducers those that cause divisions and offences in the Church and broach novel opinions ought to be avoided Rom. 16. 17. Mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have learned and avoid them 2 Iohn 10. If any man bring another Doctrine receive him not into your house neither bid him God speed 1 Tim. 6. 5. And men that are given to perverse disputings from such withdraw thy self Errour is more catching than Vice and more spreading It is more catching the face of it being represented with the loveliness of some pretence or other whereas foul actions are found hateful and more contrary to natural Conscience And besides it is more spreading Vice is like a Duel it killeth but one Errour is like a War that destroys many at once therefore we should not be familiar with these Erroneous apprehensions in Religion carry a marvellous compliance with a mans natural thoughts 4. It is not enough to avoid bad Company but we must chuse that which is good A man must have friends the use of them in this life is very great Man is a sociable Creature as Aristotle speaks Company and friendship we must have Christ himself was not without his peculiar friends there was Peter Iames and Iohn that were the flower of the Apostles that were conscious to his Transfiguration and his Agonies We must have our friends and our Society so that the advantage of good Company is very great Prov. 13. 20. He that walketh with wise men shall be wise their example will allure and excite to holy emulation and their counsel and instruction will be a great help in the business of Religion Even Saul being among the Prophets had his raptures 1 Sam. 19. 23. so living in the Company of godly men and seeing hearing and conferring with them of good things leaveth some impression 2. Some Helps and Considerations First Consider what is our chiefest good This is Principium universalissimum The last end or chiefest good is the principle which doth influence all our actions And certainly if men fix their last end aright it will have an influence upon all they do our company our business our recreation our holy Duties Well now consider What is your chiefest good and your last end If pleasure were our chiefest good and if we had nothing else to do but to pass away the time and to get rid of melancholy there would need no great care in the choice of our Company But enjoying the blessed God that is our last end and chiefest good every thing must be answerable to help you to Heaven Secondly A sincere resolution to walk with God to keep in with God firmly set for here David saith Depart from me ye evil doers for I will keep the Commandments of my God His resolution was set therefore he shakes them off When Ruth's resolution was set Naomi left off perswading When Paul's Company saw his resolution that he went bound in the spirit they ceased saying The will of the Lord be done Acts 21. 14. So this will fortifie against all suggestion they will be discouraged from haunting you more when you are resolved Thirdly Our Company will be a great part of our happiness in Heaven Heb. 12. 22. We are come to the heavenly Ierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels to the general Assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven And Matth. 8. 11. They shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of Heaven Company will be a great part of our happiness and for the present it will be a great hinderance or a great furtherance therefore when we think of this it will make us chuse those with whom we shall converse to all eternity that we may say Now I shall change places but not my Company I shall but go from Saints to Saints 4. Bad Company can yield you no comfort hereafter when trouble of Conscience comes When your heart begins to wound you they cannot or will not help Mat. 27. 4. What is that to us see thou to that If they draw you to inconvenience when it comes upon you they will yield you no relief or comfort Well he that considers he is to dye and give an account will not displease God to please men SERMON CXXVII PSAL. CXIX VER 116. Uphold me according to thy word that I may live and let me not be ashamed of my hope IN the former Verse David had bound himself by a firm resolution to keep the Commandments of his God now presently he turneth to Prayer Lord uphold me according to thy word that I may live and let me not be ashamed of my hope Our purposes and resolutions will not hold out without Gods confirming Grace David that would have the wicked depart from him there would have God draw nigh to him here Both are necessary if we would keep the Commands The company of the wicked as a great impediment must be removed Depart from me ye evil doers and then the assistance of God must be entreated Uphold me according unto thy word c. Two things he begs of God in this Verse I. Confirmation in waiting II. The full and final accomplishment of his hope In the first request there 's 1. The Blessing pray'd for Confirmation or Sustentation Uphold me 2. The ground or warrant of asking According unto thy word some Translations have it by thy word making it the instrument of his support 3. To what end That I might live In the second request an argument is intimated That frustration or disappointment of his hope would bring shame I begin with the first the Blessing pray'd for Sustentation and support Uphold me David speaketh not this with respect to his outward man as if God should keep him alive maugre the rage of his enemies Indeed God doth uphold his Creatures in that sence by his outward Providence and Divine maintenance But he speaketh this of his inward man the support of the soul that God would support him in a way of faith and comfort In Verse 114. Thou art my hiding place and my shield I hope in thy word Now Lord that I might live keep up the life of this hope And Verse 115. I will keep the Commandments of my God And now he desires God would support him in a way of courage and obedience Hence observe Doctr. Sustaining Grace is necessary to the Saints Confirmation in a state of Grace is as necessary to them as Conversion to it There is a twofold Grace which God gives habitual and actual either he works upon us per modum habitus infusing
upon them as many Herbs in Nature have a signature to shew for what use they serve Obad. 15. As thou hast done it shall be done unto thee thy reward shall return upon thine own head When God payeth men home in their own Coin Gen. 9. 6. Whoso sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed it is not only a Law what ought to be done in Justice but a Rule of Providence what shall be done Pharaoh was the Authour of the execution in drowning the Israelites Children so Pharaoh and all his Host his Nobility and Men of War were drowned in the Sea Ahab's blood was licked up with Dogs in the place where they licked up the blood of Naboth Iezebel was more guilty than he Ahab permitted it but Iezebel contrived it Ahab humbled himself therefore his Body was buried but Iezebel was intombed in the Bellies of Gods Haman was hanged on the Gallows set up for Mordecai Henry III. of France was killed in the same Chamber where the Massacre was contrived Charles IX flowed with blood in his bed Thus God will requite men in the same kind His own people meet with this Iacob supplanted his Elder Brother and therefore the Elder is brought to him instead of the Younger Asa put the Prophet in the Stocks and he is diseased in his feet Ioseph's Brethren were not flexible to his request afterwards when they were in extremity Ioseph proves inexorable to them Gen. 42. 21. We are verily guilty concerning our Brother in that we saw the anguish of his soul when he besought us and we would not hear therefore is this distress come upon us How comes this into their minds this was many years after the Fact was committed some twenty years as they compute So God deals with his Children in like manner as they dealt with others that their Consciences may work the more kindly The same is observed concerning David and Absolom 2 Sam. 12. 10 11 12. He took the Wife of Uriah to be his Wife and Absalom took his Wives before his eyes St. Paul consented to the stoning of Steven and assisted in the execution They laid down their Garments at his feet therefore afterwards Paul himself for preaching the Gospel is stoned and left for dead Acts 14. 19 20. Barnabas was not stoned that assisted Paul both were alike offensive to the men of Iconium in preaching the Gospel Paul was sensible of this as a great part of his guilt Acts 22. 20. and his Conscience works upon that Many other instances might be given but this enough 3. When Judgments fall upon them in the very act of their provocation Thus many are taken away by a violent death in the very heat of their drunkenness Zimri and Cozbi lost their lives in the very instant when they were unloading their lusts and many times we see punishment treads upon the heels of sin 4. When they are Authours of their own destruction Not only in such a sensible manner as Saul Achitophel and Iudas that murthered themselves but thus when men are given up to their headlong Counsels to break themselves Prov. 5. 22. His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself and he shall be holden with the Cords of his sins Wicked men are often whipt with their own Rods. And Psal. 9. 15 16. In the Net which they hid is their own foot taken The Lord is known by the Iudgment which he executeth the wicked is snared in the work of his own hands Higgajon Selah When by their own errours mistakes and furious passions they undo themselves 5. When evil men are brought down wonderfully suddenly contrary to all apparent likelihood and the course of second Causes Psal. 64. 7. God shall shoot at them with an Arrow suddenly shall they be wounded so they shall make their own tongue to fall upon themselves And Psal. 58. 7. unto the 11th Verse there 's this Consolation given to the Church That enemies shall be destroyed before the Pots feel the thorns When they are contriving and boiling somewhat in their minds before the Pots feel the thorns God takes them away suddenly in an instant and then men shall say Verily there is a rewarder of evil 6. When Gods Judgments are executed by unlikely means and instruments Sisera a great Captain destroyed by Iael Iudg. 4. 21. Adrian the Pope strangled by a Gnat Arius voiding his Bowels in a Draught after his perjury Cora Dathan and Abiram when the Earth clave to receive them that had made a rent in the Congregation and Herod was eaten up with Lice 7. When such accidents bring a great deal of Glory to God and peace and tranquillity to his people as hanging Haman with his Sons upon his own Gallows Esth. 7. 9. and 8. 17. 8. When God supplies the defects of mans Justice and their iniquity finds them out when they think all is forgotten and shall be no more heard of Psal. 9. 12. When he maketh inquisition for blood he remembreth them he forgetteth not the cry of the humble There are many instances how God finds out men that seem to escape well enough from mans hands when they could not be found out by man Zeph. 3. 5. the Prophet tells us Every morning he will bring his Iudgments to light There is some sinner or other which God notably punisheth that men may owne his Providence 9. When the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the express letter is made good upon men Hos. 7. 12. I will chastise them as their Congregation hath heard The word doth fully take effect and what they would not believe they are made to feel By these rules we may observe Gods Judgments with profit To quicken you to do so consider First It would be a mighty cure to Atheism There are a sort of men setled on their lees that say in their heart The Lord will not do good neither will he do evil Zeph. 1. 12. that think God is so shut up within the Curtain of the Heavens that he takes no notice of what is done below These vain conceits would soon vanish if men would but turn Students in Gods Providence they would soon cry out Verily there is a reward for the righteous verily there is a God that judgeth in the Earth they would say there is a Ruler of the affairs of the world and a righteous Judg that takes care of all things here below Usually men think amiss of God as if good and evil were of no respect with him but all things were governed by chance as Iob's wife said Dost thou yet retain thy integrity Curse God and dye Mal. 2. 12. Ye have wearied the Lord with your words yet ye say Wherein have we wearied him When ye say Every one that doth evil is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in them or Where is the God of judgment We do notsee his Justice and so have atheistical and evil conceits of God When we fancy evil men are in esteem and
whatever cometh if they be mighty God is mightier if they be crafty God is wiser 'T is a great crime to fear men so as not to trust in God 't is a great sin to fear men so as not to fear God when we comply with them in things displeasing to God this is to set men above God Secondly We come to the limitation end or fruit of this suretiship For good There are three Expositions of this Clause as noting the end the cause the event 1. Undertake for me ut sim bonus justus so Rabbi Arama on the place be surety for me that I may be good Theodoret expounds it Undertake that I shall make good my resolution of keeping thy Law He that enjoineth undertaketh though we have precepts and promises without Gods undertaking we shall never be able to perform our Duty 2. In good so some read it God would not take his part in an evil Cause to commend a wrong Cause to Gods protection is to provoke him to hasten our punishment to make us serve under our Oppressours But when we have a good Cause and a good Conscience he will owne us we cannot expect he should maintain us and bear us out in the Devils service wherein we have intangled our selves by our own sin 3. For good so 't is often rendered Psal. 86. 17. Shew me a token for good Jer. 14. 11. Pray not for this people for good So Neh. 13. 31. Remember me O my God for good So here Be surety for thy servant for good Doctr. We should only desire the interposing of Gods Providence so as may be for good to us I shall first give you the Reasons and then give you some Rules concerning this good here mentioned Reason 1. Because then we pray according to Gods undertaking Psal. 34. 10. But they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing they may want food want rayment want many things but they shall want no good thing Psal. 84. 11. No good thing will he withhold He may keep us low and bare withhold many temporal mercies from us feed us from hand to mouth and short Commons may be sweet and wholesome and deny to give us larger revenues and incomes If they were good for us we should have them God withholds these things so as our need and good doth require Ier. 24. 5. Whom I have sent out of this place into the land of the Caldeans for their good Their Captivity was for good Reas. 2. Because then we pray according to the new Nature old Nature would have ease the new Nature would have Grace the flesh would be pleased but the spirit would be profited and God hears not the voice of the flesh but spirit in prayer Rom. 8. 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth what is the mind of the spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God 2. Let me give you some Rules 1. This good is not always the good of the flesh not always the good of prosperity Sometimes the good of prosperity may be good Prov. 24. 25. But to them that rebuke him shall be delight and a good blessing shall come upon them A good blessing shall come upon them that plead Gods Cause against the wicked There is the blessing of prosperity-good and adversity-good All good is more or less so as it cometh near or less near the chiefest good therefore that is good that tendeth to make us spiritually better more like to God and capable of Communion with him Lam. 3. 27. It is good for a man that he bear the Yoke in his youth That is good which conduceth to our everlasting good 2. God knoweth what is better for us than we do our selves We ask a Knife wherewith to cut our selves It would be the greatest misery if God should always carve out our condition according to our own fancy we would soon pray our selves into a snare if our will were the rule of our prayers and ask that which would be cruelty in God to grant I will give you an instance in Lot Gen. 19. 17 18. Make haste escape to the mountain lest thou be consumed I cannot saith he escape to the mountain behold now this City is near it is but a little one and my soul shall live Lot presenteth his own fancy to Gods counsel and choice for him this little place was in the Plain he was perswaded the shower of brimstone would overtake him before he got thither Often 't is thus with us though God should command and we obey we lift up our will above his and doat upon our own fancies and will prescribe to God think 't is better to live by sense than by faith This mountain was the weaker Border of the Plain Now this was weakness in Lot surely God that had took him out of Sodom by the hand of the Angels strucken the Sodomites with blindness which was an instance of Gods great power and goodness to him Now compare the seventeenth and eighteenth Verses with the thirtieth Verse And Lot went out of Zoar and dwelt in the mountain he and his two Daughters with him for he feared to dwell in Zoar and he dwelt in a Cave he and his two Daughters Mark here when God biddeth him go to the mountain then he goeth to Zoar when God gave him leave to tarry in Zoar then he goes and dwells in the mountain he was afraid in Zoar when he saw the horrible desolation of all the Country about it Now see the ill success of his own choice and how badly we provide for our selves A little time will shew us our sin and folly his abode in the mountain drew him to incest Another instance Hos. 13. 11. I gave them a King in mine anger and took him away in my wrath God may let things succeed with us to our hurt If we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us 1 John 5. 14. God is a God of wisdom he knoweth certainly what will be good for us He is a God of Bowels and loveth us dearly and will certainly cast all things for the best therefore God is to be Judge both for time and kind of our deliverance otherwise we may meet with wrath in every condition whether we want or have our will but if we referr it to him we shall never want what is best for us The Shepherd must chuse our Pastures whether lean or fat bare or full grounds the Child is not to be governed by his fancy but the Fathers discretion nor the sick man by his own fancy but the Physicians skill our will is not the chief reason of all things 3. That which is not good may be good and though for the present we see it not yet we shall see it though not good in its nature it may be good in its fruit Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things shall work together for good to them that love God a little faith and a
they can bear the open dishonouring and blaspheming of God This is the true sense but because the heart is deceitful First Be sure your Cause be good your Adversaries evil that ye may say Psal. 74. 22. Arise O Lord plead thine own Cause 'T is not for your sins but your sins but your righteousness the hatred is not against the body Indeed they pretend some little faults 'T is as if a Leper should hate a man because he hath some pimples in his face Something they would lay to their charge Secondly That we use all means with God and Men to reclaim them praying for them Matth. 6. 44. Pray for them that despightfully use you Mourning for their sins Ier. 23. 19. My soul shall weep in secret for your pride Heaping Coals of fire upon their heads by all acts of kindness condescending to them as far as possibly we can Rom. 12. 18. These arts become his Kingdome that is not to be planted by force but consent them that would have the zeal of God not of a party Thirdly Be sure your principle be zeal for Gods Glory not a desire to establish your own interest and to see revenge on a party that differeth from you Luke 9. 54 55. You know not what spirit you are of Religious affections overset us and fleshly zeal puts on a holy spiritual Guise and Mask and we think 't is for the honour of Christ. Fourthly Not against particular persons but the opposite faction to godliness In general destroy all the enemies of Christ c. Secondly For the manner How We must seek to God first with submission not prescribing to God nor making a snare to our selves We that have short and revengeful Spirits cannot judge aright of Gods patience which is infinite out of fleshliness and affection to our own ease And so our times Iohn 7. 6. your time is always ready if none of these be yet we are limited Creatures and great is the wisdom of God and his power admirable it doth not belong to us to guide the affairs of the world Psal. 78. 41. We must not prescribe opportunity to him fixing times Besides that it argueth a spirit too much addicted to and eying of temporal happiness It doth much unsettle us and harden others The Devil maketh advantage of our disappointment Therefore not only when it seemeth seasonable to us we may seek to him for deliverance Once more there are other things concurr besides the enemies ripeness for Judgment preparing his peoples hearts fitting those instruments for his work therefore all is left to Gods will and let him take his time Use of all is to teach us how to behave our selves in these times with patience and yet with hope and waiting 'T is the time of Iacob's trouble but there will be a time of deliverance Ier. 30. 7. With patience God will have a time to chastise his people We must bear it patiently it will make Crosses sit easie they may be greater and longer than our joys Psal. 90. 15. Make us glad according to the days wherein thou hast afflicted us and the years wherein we have seen evil Secondly With hope let us expect it Certainly it will not exceed the time limited by God That time is not long Isai. 13. 22. Her time is near to come and her days shall not be prolonged Ezek. 12. 21. to 28. And the word of the Lord came unto me saying Son of man what is that Proverb that ye have in the land of Israel saying The days are prolonged and every vision faileth Tell them therefore Thus saith the Lord I will make this Proverb to cease and they shall no more use it as a Proverb in Israel but say unto them The days are at hand and the effect of every vision for there shall be no more any vain vision nor flattering divination within the house of Israel for I am the Lord. I will speak and the word that I shall speak shall come to pass it shall be no more prolonged Faith should see it as present approaching and then let us wait his leisure minding God in prayer SERMON CXXXIX PSAL. CXIX VER 127. Therefore I love thy Commandments above Gold yea above fine Gold IN the Words we have I. A Note of inference Therefore II. The Duty inferred I love thy Commandments III. The degree of that love Above Gold amplified by the repetition with some advantage in the expression Yea above fine Gold III. Gold by a Senechdoche is put for all worldly things the comforts and profits of this life as in many other places as Psal. 19. 10. More to be desired are they than Gold yea than much fine Gold sweeter also than Honey and the Honey Comb. The two Bastard Goods with which the World is inchanted are pleasure and profit Old people are all for profit young people are all for pleasure Now both these truly so called are found in the Word of God So in Prov. 8. 10 11. Receive my instruction and not silver and knowledge rather than choise gold for Wisdom is better than Rubies and all the things that are to be desired are not to be compared to it So Prov. 8. 19. My fruit is better than gold yea than fine gold and my revenues than choise silver So Prov. 3. 14. For the merchandise thereof is better than gold and the gain thereof than fine gold So Prov. 16. 16. How much better is it to get Wisdom than Gold and to get Understanding rather to be chosen than silver This Comparison is used so often for two Reasons 1. Because it is more prized in the World All things that have a goodness in them have a certain Bait suitable to the several Appetites of men but in most mens opinions Gold seemeth chiefly to be desired partly for its beauty but chiefly for its use it being the great instrument of Commerce that doth all things in the world The corruption of mans heart addeth a greater price to it and therefore is the thirst of it so unsatisfied Now the Word and that wisdom and godliness which it teacheth is far above Gold and fine Gold 2. Because it is the usual temptation to draw off men from the love and study and obedience of the Word Babylon's abominations are offered to the world in a golden Cup Rev. 17. 4. And the Woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet colour and decked with Gold and precious Stones and Pearls having a golden Cup in her hand full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication Preferments are the Baits of that black Religion True Christianity consists in sound Graces Pseudo-Christianity in pomp and state and worldly advantages and the Apostle telleth us 1 Tim. 6. 10. That the love of money is the root of all evil which while some have coveted after they have erred from the faith Therefore doth the spirit of God so often compare spiritual things to Gold and here David preferreth his love to the Word before Worldlings love to
other Branch And I hate every false way Where we have The Act Hate the Object False way the Extent Every Whatsoever is contrary to the purity of Gods Word Doctr. That 't is a good note of a renewed and obedient heart to hate every false way This will appear from 1. The sorts and kinds of hatred 2. The causes 3. The effects or the comparison of hatred with anger 1. From the sorts and kinds of hatred which are reckoned up to be two First Odium abominationis Secondly Odium inimicitiae First Odium abominationis an hatred of flight and aversation called by some Odiuni offensionis the hatred of offence 'T is defined by Aquinas to be Dissonantia quaedam appetitûs ad id quod apprehenditur ut repugnans c. 'T is a repugnancy of the appetite to what is apprehended as contrary and prejudicial to it Such there is in the will of the regenerate for they apprehend sin as repugnant and contrary to their renewed will to the unregenerate 't is agreeable and suitable as Draff to the appetite of a Swine or Grass and Hay to a Bullock or Horse Now this hatred is a good sign that cannot be found in another that is not born of God The mortification of sin standeth principally in the hatred of it Sin dyeth when it dyeth in the affections When we look upon it as an offence to us destructive to our happiness and as it is truly grieved for and hated by us The unregenerate may hate sin materially considered that is the thing which is a sin but they cannot hate it formally considered as sin under the notion of a sin for then they would hate all sin à quatenus ad omne valet consequentia As for instance thus A covetous man hateth prodigal and riotous Courses not as they are sinful and contrary to Gods Law but as contrary to his humour and covetous will Secondly Odium inimicitiae or the hatred of enmity This enmity is nothing else but a willing of evil or mischief to the thing or person hated and that out of mere displicency dislike or distaste of the person hated This is a sure note the regenerate hate their sins in that they would have them arraigned crucified mortified they would fain see the heart-blood of sin let out therefore they oppose watch against and resist it as their mortal deadly enemy When a man pursues sin would have the life of it this enmity cannot be quiet 't is an active enmity diligent in praying mourning watching striving using all holy means to get it out of our hearts wishing groaning waiting complaining that we may get rid of it Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death They follow their work hard 2. The Causes of this hatred There are three causes of it First Spiritual knowledge and illumination that is one cause of hatred Psal. 119. 104. Through thy precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way When the heart is thick set and well fraughted with Divine knowledge a man cannot sin freely Those that are exercised in the word of God find some consideration or other to quicken to the hatred of sin The Word is a proper instrument to destroy sin Psal. 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee Ephes. 6. 13. Our affections follow our apprehensions We come to the heart by the mind Ier. 31. 19. After I was instructed I smote upon my thigh In the word of God are the most proper Reasons and Arguments to kill sin Secondly The love of God Psas. 97. 10. Ye that love the Lord hate evil He doth not say forbear it but hate it The cause of hatred is the love of that good unto which the thing or person hated is contrary and repugnant Love to the chiefest good is accompanied with hatred of sin which is the chiefest evil The one is as natural to Grace as the other The new Nature hath its flight and aversation as well as its choice and prosecution to things that are hurtful to it as well as good and profitable Thirnly A filial fear of God Prov. 8. 13. The fear of the Lord is to hate evil pride and arrogancy and the evil way and the froward mouth do I hate Certainly this is to fear God to hate what God hateth and as God hateth and because God hateth Now God hateth all sin pride and arrogancy that is sins of thought which put us upon vain and foolish musings And then the sins of the tongue are expressed by froward mouth Nothing so natural to us as filthy and evil speaking And then the sins of practice the evil way They that fear God will hate all these sins These Graces are Strangers to unrenewed hearts It argueth a Divine Nature when we hate when what and as and because God hates it Eadem velle nolle est summa amicitia 3. A third Argument is from the comparison of hatred with anger Unregenerate men may be angry with sin because anger is consistent with love One may be angry with his Wife Children Friends where yet he tenderly affects First Anger is a sudden and short hatred a lasting and durable passion Anger is furor brevis curable by time hatred incurable by the greatest tract of time The Unregenerate are displeased with their sins for a spurt but the regenerate constantly disaffected towards them There is 1 Iohn 3. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is a constant principle of resistance in the renewed heart passion is a casual dislike but the new Nature a rooted enmity an habitual aversation to what is evil Secondly Anger is only against singulars but hatred is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the whole kind Thus we hate every Wolf and every Serpent every Thief and every Calumniator So is this universal it respects sin as sin and hateth all sin though never so profitable and pleasant Not upon foreign and accidental reasons as Esther 3. 16. Haman thought scorn to lay hands upon Mordecai alone but sought the destruction of all the Jews The same reasons that encline us to hate one sin encline us to hate all sin The violation of Gods Law is a contempt of Gods Authority a breach of spiritual friendship one grieveth the spirit of God as well as the other Every sin is hateful to God so 't is to those that are made partakers of the Divine Nature Thirdly Anger may be pacified or appeased with the sufferings of the thing or person with which we are angry but hatred is implacable nothing can content and satisfie it but the ruine or not being of the thing and party hated David was angry with Absolom but loth to have him destroyed only corrected and reduced when he sent out Forces against him Deal gently with the young man So many deal with their sins we reason pray strive complain but 't is but an angry fit we are displeased with
Heaven and happiness when we have served him faithfully and patiently continued in well-doing You know the Apostle distinguisheth that there is a reward according to debt and a reward according to Grace Rom. 4. 4. Though it be righteous with God to give the reward yet he gives it not out of debt or for any condignity of worth but he gives it out of Grace And so all the comforts we have from obedience are said to come from the righteousness of God Even the pardon of sin which is one of the freest acts of God and wherein he discovers most of his mercy 1 Iohn 1. 9. He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins It is not faithful and gracious but just And so for the eternal reward in 2 Thess. 1. 6 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a just or righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you I you think it is just with God to punish evil but is it a righteous thing that he should reward our obedience Read on And to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Iesus shall be revealed from heaven c. God in righteousness is bound by his own promise to give this reward Heb. 6. 10. God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love How is Gods righteousness engaged Partly by Christ Christ having given satisfaction equivalent to the offence and wrong to his Majesty and having interposed an everlasting merit it is just with God to forgive the sin as it is just for the Creditor to forgive the debt when he hath received satisfaction from the Surety And it is just because God is bound by his own promise he hath promised a Crown of life to them at the end of their tryal Iames 1. 12. And it is part of his Justice to make good his Word by promise God hath made himself a Debtor So 2 Tim. 4. 8. Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Iudg will give me at that day Bernard glosseth sweetly upon that place Paulus expect at Coronam Iustitiae Iustitiae Dei non suae justum est ut reddat quod debet debet autem quod pollicitus est It is just with God to pay what he oweth and God oweth what he hath promised and so it is a Crown of righteousness which God the righteous Judg will give us at that day Once more it is just with God not to forget your labour of love because it agrees with his general Justice or the rectitude of his nature it falls in with his Law as God is a holy perfect Being he cannot be indifferent to good and evil it concerns him to see Ut bonis bene sit malis male that it be well with them that do well and ill with them that do ill But how upon terms it should go well with them that must be interpreted according to either Covenant either according to the exactness of the Law and so no flesh can be justified in his sight or according to the moderation of the Gospel where the soul sincerely frames it self to do the will of God and it is not an unrighteous thing with God to give you according to your labour of love and zeal for his Glory Secondly There 's his vindictive Justice on all Sinners God punisheth none but Sinners and only for sin and that ever according to the measure of the sin as it is more or less so they have more or less punishment Rom. 2. 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Iew first and also of the Gentile God will render vengeance to the Gentiles that had the light of nature to teach them God to shew them the invisible things of his Godhead and Power but chiefly upon those that have been bred up in his Ordinances and mostly upon them that have rejected the terms of Grace offered them in the Gospel for so it is said 2 Thess. 1. 8. He will render vengeance upon all them that obey not the Gospel And Iohn 3. 18 19. He that believeth not is condemned already The Law is passed upon him but this is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil Their sin is inexcusable that will not lay hold upon the offers of Grace They have no cause to murmure or impute their damnation to Gods secret purpose in their own Consciences they may read the justness of their condemnation Well then this is Gods Justice it is that property by which God acts agreeable to his nature as Sovereign Lord and agreeable to his Covenant as Governour and Judg of the World either his Covenant of Works or Grace 2. To prove that God is just I shall prove it by four things First From the perfection of the Divine Nature The perfection of the Divine Will is such that he necessarily loveth righteousness and hateth iniquity As the perfection of Gods understanding includes all intellectual Vertues so the perfection of his will all moral Vertues There can be no vertuous act of the will either in men or Angels that doth not agree to God in a far more excellent manner and measure and therefore if there be such a quality as justice and righteousness in Angels and men if holy Angels and just men made perfect certainly there a just God This rectitude in men and Angels is accidental and separable from their Being Angels may be Angels yet not just as appears in the Devils But in God it is essential as his Essence is necessarily so his integrity must needs be so In short God must be just and holy because he necessarily loves himself and hates every thing that is contrary to himself Psal. 11. 7. The righteous God loveth righteousness and his countenance beholdeth the upright If they be just he loves their Justice because he loves himself if unjust he hates their injustice because they are contrary to himself Secondly He could not else govern the world or judge men according to their offences Next his Nature God's office shews him just that inferrs his Justice as he is Governour and Judge of the World so we shall see Gen. 18. 15. The Iudg of all the Earth shall not he do right It must needs be so that the Judge of the Earth will do right Rom. 5. 6. Is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance God forbid for then how shall God judge the World It is impossible to imagine that he can be the supreme Judge who is not just Among men Appeals are allowed because men are fallible and apt to pervert equity and judgment and this is their relief that they can appeal higher But now Eccl. 5. 8. If thou seest the oppression of the poor and violent perverting of Iudgment and Iustice marvel not at the matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than
overseen a God of Judgment by whom all things are weighed 1 Sam. 2. 3. every dram and scruple of the Cross. A just God and will punish no more than is deserved Iob 34. 23. He will not lay upon man more then is right As well no more than is meet as no more than is right He is a good God does only what our need and profit requireth For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men Lam. 3. 33. 3. Doctrine That 't is the property of a gracious Soul to delight in Gods Commandments 'T was Davids Practice and 't is the mark of a blessed man Psal. 1. 2. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord. And Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the Law after the inward man And Psal. 112. 1. Blessed is the man that delighteth greatly in his Commandments Delight in Moral things saith Aquinas is the rule by which we may Judge of mens Goodness or Badness Delectatio est quies voluntatis in bono Men are good and bad as the Objects of their delight are They are good who delight in good things and they evil who delight in evil things We shall consider the nature of Delight I. In the Causes II. In the Effects of it I. The Causes are 1. Proportion and Suitableness Sensitive Creatures delight much in such food as is agreeable to their nature now the Commandments are suitable to the renewed heart the Law is in their Heart Psal. 40. 8. And Psal. 37. 31. The Law of his God is in his heart Divine qualities are planted there which suit with the rule of Holiness and Righteousness Eph. 4. 24. And this is the sum of the Law or Commandements of God 2. A second Cause is Possession of it and Communion with it Oritur saith Aquinas ex praesentia connaturalis boni Now one may be said to possess the Law or enjoy the Law in regard of the knowledge of it or Obedience to it Ioh. 14. 21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me The knowledge of the Law so it be not superficial and fleshly but full and thorough and savory is very Comfortable and goeth toward a good note but Obedience to the Law is the cause of delight therein Gods servants rejoyce when they can bring on their hearts with any Life and Power in the way of Gods Testimonies Psal. 119. 14. I have rejoyced in the way of thy Testimonies more than in all Riches Thence cometh their Comfort and Obedience 3. A third Cause of Delight is a precedent love of the Object Love is a Complacency in and Propension towards that which is Good absolutely considered both in the presence and absence of it Desire noteth the absence of a Good Delight the presence and fruition of it Therefore a love of the Object delighted in is essentially presupposed to delight So that it is impossible for any thing to be delighted in but it is first loved We have experience that many things are delightful in themselves and known to be such which yet do not actually delight if they be hated A man may tast of the sweetness of honey yet if he have an Antipathy against it he may Ioath it David in this Psalme presupposeth love as Antecedent to delight Psal. 119. 47. I will delight my self in thy Commandments which I have loved Carnal men cannot say so For every one that doth evil hateth the light Ioh. 3. 20. The renewed onely love the Commandments Yea it doth not only presuppose a love of simple Complacency but also a love of Desire for all things are first desired before delighted in None can truly delight in Obedience but such as desire it Such as can say with David verse 40. Behold I have longed after thy Precepts And Verse 131. I opened my mouth and panted for I longed after thy Commandements Now all such are Blessed Matth. 5. 5. II. Let us consider the Effects 1. The first is Dilatatio Cordis The inlarging of the Heart it openeth and wideneth the Heart towards the reception of the Law and maketh it more capacious and comprehensive thereof than otherwise it would be Psal. 119. 32. I will run the way of thy Commandements when thou shalt have inlarged my Heart The Heart is at Ease and in a commodious Condition as a Body that is in a large and fit place where it is not streightned and this is as Oil to the Wheels 2. Delectatio causat sui ●…tim Desiderium Delight in an Object causeth a Thrist in it self and more of it self Even the Angels and blessed Spirits feel this effect of Delight that it never cloyeth but they desire more of their own Happiness Much more doth it work so in us who are in such an imperfect state of injoyment upon a two fold Account 1. The Objects of spiritual delight are perfect but the Acts whereby we injoy and possess those Objects are imperfect God is an Infinite and All-satisfying Good but the acts whereby we enjoy him here in this Life whereby we have Union and Communion with him are imperfect We know believe love hope but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. Hereupon that delight which ariseth from the imperfect fruition of God here in this life stirreth up to an eager desire after fuller fruition and unto a farther inlargement and intension of those Acts whereby such fruition is attained or wherein it consisteth still Thirsting after more when tasted 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. 2. Spiritual Delights may be said to cause a Desire as Desire importeth a denial or exclusion of Loathing For the Objects of spiritual delight and the Acts whereby they are injoyed can never exceed the degree and measure required in them unless by accident by reason of some bodily act concurrent therewith and subservient unto the spiritual operation The Desire can never be too great the expression of it may be burdensome We may easily exceed the bounds of moderation in Carnal things but not in Spiritual They can never be too high and intense Therefore fresh desires and earnest longings are still kindled and quickned in us it never dulls the Appetite but draweth out the Soul farther and farther and cannot be too eager and zealous after Holiness 3. Another effect of Delight is perficit operationem it makes the Operation to its Object more perfect than otherwise it would be As a motive or means it exciteth to a greater care and diligence in promoting the End which we pursue The Delight in the Law helpeth to perfect our Meditation therein and Observation thereof by its sweetness it quickeneth provoketh and allureth to a greater Zeal in both Delight maketh all things easie 1 Ioh. 5. 3. All her wayes are wayes of Pleasantness Prov. 3. 17. The Sabbath is a delight Isa. 58. 13. It facilitates Duties and removes difficulties in working Now this Delight must be sincere otherwise they are but like the Carnal Iews who did delight to know his Wayes Isa. 58.
are likely to be Cruel because Profane When the Fear of God is layed aside and all respect to his Word there is nothing to be expected but the worst of Evils They mind not thy Law therefore care not what Mischief they do me 2. To increase his Confidence of help For God will not favour a Corrupt Party Psal. 139. 19. Surely thou wilt slay the wicked O God Psal. 94. 10. The throne of wickedness hath no fellowship with thee Doctrine The iniquity of Persecutors is some matter of Confidence to the Oppressed As David from those that drew near to mischief him conceiveth some incouragement Because they were far from Gods Law There are several Considerations 1. Usually the Servants of God have been most hated and troubled by the worst of Men so it usually falls out that the worst and most virulent Enemies of Religion are those that are infamous for other Crimes They have the greatest pike against them because they cannot endure the Righteousness of Gods Image on them Psal. 38. 20. They are my Adversaries because I follow the thing that good is So Ioh. 7. 7. The world cannot hate you but me it hateth because I testifie of it that the works thereof are evil 2. You may take notice of this wickedness and represent it so to God For he is the Judge of the World and it concerneth him to cut short their power to do mischief that have such a ready principle to act it and are likely to have no other restraints than God layeth upon them by his Providence and the Interest of their Affairs But of this before about aggravating the Danger 3. When we do so be sure the thing be true That they are not only injurious to us but open Enemies to God and Godliness before we speak thus of those that hate us or work any Trouble to us in the World As long as the Cause will admit of a favourable Construction we should take heed of such Suggestions I observe this the rather because man is so partial to himself that whosoever are Enemies to him he presently thinketh they are enemies to Godliness And therefore when we pass our Judgment on any Person and Cause it had need be conformed to Truth for otherwise it argueth great irreverence towards God to make him Conscious to our Revenges and private Passions Psal. 139. 21 22 23 24. We had need try our Cause when Gods quarrel and our interest are joyned that there be not some dregs of private Spleen and rash Censurings mixed therewith and that Passion doth not rule us but Duty in these Complaints and that it is not our own Interest but Gods Quarrel they being open Enemies to him And therefore we must be confident that such as we pray against are in a wicked condition and ingaged in an evil Course 4. When this is clear there is some Comfort and Confidence in the badness of our Enemies 1. Because God and we are ingaged in a common Cause for our Adversaries are against God as well as against us Now it is better to be afflicted by them than to have fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness or to cry up a confederacy with them that cry up a confederacy against God Psal. 139. 22. 2. 'T is a great satisfaction to us to be opposed by evil Men or common Enemies of the power of Godliness Certainly it would be more grievous to us to be oppressed by them that have a show of Godliness than the openly profane Psal. 55. 12 13. the worst that a professed enemy can do is more tolerable than the injury of a Friend It importeth a dishonour to be opposed by the good as having an ill Cause in hand or unworthy to be assisted but it helpeth to make the Cause more clear when we see what kind of Persons we have to do withal such as we cannot but count wicked because they have no regard to Gods Law Our Cause would not be so clear if it were with them that fear God 3. The more wicked they are the more ripe for Judgment especially if they be a corrupt party in the Visible Church For where we perceive wickedness to Reign there we may be sure Destruction will follow Use. Well then when ever this falleth out mind God of it and be not discouraged An ill Cause will not always prevail Only let us be prepared for Deliverance as they are ripe for Destruction Otherwise none so bad but good enough to make a Rod to scourge Gods Children And then have Patience such are our Enemies as are Gods also they are far from Obedience to Gods Law SERMON CLXIX PSALM CXIX VER 151. Thou art near O Lord and all thy Commandments are truth IN the former Verse the Enemies are represented as near and near to do Mischief but far from the Law of God Here in the Text there is somewhat put in opposition to both 1. For their nearness to do Mischief God is near to help 2. They are far off from the Law the Man of God asserteth that God's Commandments are Truth All their contempt of the Law did not abate and lessen his Esteem of it so that the summ of the Verse is That the Enemies cannot be so ready to hurt as God is to help and deliver they cannot go about to defeat Promises as God will go about to fulfil them Mark he compareth the readiness of wicked men to hurt with the readiness of God their Contempt of the Word with the Truth of the Word or God's Justification of it In short in the Verse we may observe two branches I. Something spoken of God And II. Something of his Law I. That which is spoken of God is That he is near a present help to those that persist in the Obedience of his Will for nearness doth not only import his favour or Inclination to help them but that he will not delay his help too long his help is at hand therefore called a present help in trouble Psal. 46. 1. and the Lord is at my right hand Psal. 16. 8. Ready as our Second in all Conflicts to stand by us support and comfort us in our Troubles yea to deliver us that is the Notion of nearness in the Text near as the Enemies are near onely he is near to defend as they are near to destroy when to appearance Danger is nearest at the same time help and salvation is nearest also and this doth allay all our Cares and Fears Phil. 4. 5 6. The Lord is at hand therefore be careful for nothing Still present by his Providence or hastening his second coming Rev. 22. 20. I come quickly I rather quote that place for the Septuagint have it here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore he bids us be careful for nothing certainly the belief of God's nearness should incourage us 2. That which is said of his Word and Law is Thy Commandments are Truth one would think it had been more
him now you can never reason it out with God it was Iobs Presumption to think that he could order his Cause before him Iob 23. 3 4 5. Oh that I knew where I might find him that I might come even to his seat I would order my cause before him and fill my mouth with Arguments I would know the words which he would answer me and understand what he would say unto me No there is no trusting to the equity of our Cause or hope to clear our selves before Gods Judgment-seat we have no way left but submitting and humbling our selves and suing out our pardon in a Broken-hearted manner no way but yielding to the Justice of the first Covenant and putting in the Plea of Favour and Grace according to the second Psal. 130. 3 4. If thou Lord shouldest mark iniquity O Lord who can stand but there is forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared If you deny or excuse sin you stick to the first Covenant and plead Innocency and then God will deal with you according to the Tenour of strict Justice but if you humbly confess sin and acknowledge your guiltiness and shame then you may plead Mercy Justice dealeth with the Innocent Mercy with the Guilty We speak now of the first of the strife between Men and Men or the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent who do not only oppress them by Violence but seem to have a Plea against them in Law because of the seeming Justice of their quarrel and the Calumnies and Slaunders wherewith they burden their Cause Therefore David beggeth God to plead his Cause for him and elsewhere that God would stand by him not only as a Champion and Second but as a Patron and Advocate Psal. 35. 1. Plead my cause against them that strive with me fight against them that fight against me as they alledge false things against him and condemn him as being in an evil Cause and evil way so plead my Cause against them that strive with me as they opposed him with Violence so fight against them that fight against me In this Point I. The Nature of Gods pleading our Cause II. The Necessity of it III. What hopes there are that he will plead the Cause of his People I. The Nature of this Pleading would first be explained and here 1. In what Quality God pleadeth for us in all Judicial proceedings there are the principal contending Persons and those are called ultor reus the Plaintiff and Defendant and the manner of proceeding in Judgment is that the Plaintiff bringeth forth his Bill and the Defendant his Answer but besides these principal contending Persons there are the Witnesses the Advocate the Judge Now in some sense God might be all these Testis Advocatus Iudex without any wrong and unjustice Our Witness to attest for us as he knoweth all things and knoweth our hearts for as to such do the Saints often appeal to him Our Advocate to plead for us for he is tender of the credit of his People and hath undertaken to preserve them from the strife of Tongues Psal. 31. 20. Thou shalt hide them in the secreet of thy presence from the pride of Men thou shalt keep them secretly in thy Pavilion from the strife of Tongues As a Judge to give sentence in our behalf or such a Decree whereby the Adversary may be convinced of our righteous cause and our innocency cleared and all this may be called Gods pleading either as Testis Advocatus or Iudex But I rather confine it to the last God's pleading is rather as a Judge not as Advocatus but as Patronus that is a more proper and honourable Name Zonaras tells us that the Romans called their Patrons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it was enacted in the Law of the twelve Tables si Patronus clienti fraudem fecerit sacer esto If any man had deceived his Client he was accursed devoted to slaughter and any man might kill him Clientes quasi colentes Patroni quasi Patres saith Servius So that to deceive a Client was as to deceive a Son This was begun by Romulus who commended the common People and worser sort to the Nobles leaving every Man his liberty to choose whom he would for his Patron and that defence of them was called Patronage and the jus patronatus during this Constitution consisted in these Duties and Offices they were to defend the Poor in Judgment to answer for them in all points of Law they were to take care of them that none might wrong them present or absent they were omnem accusatoris impetum sustinere and this jus patronatus was of such Authority among the Ancients that Marcus Cato telleth us that first the name of Father was most sacred next that of Patron It were long to say all that might be said of them this is enough that their principal work was to be present at all causes wherein their poor Client was concerned and to appear for him and defend him as they would their own cause Advocates were taken in afterward when Laws were multiplied to suggest what was Law they were men skilful in the Law See Halls Lexicon Now thus it is God pleads the cause of his People as their Patron who hath taken them into his Tutelage and Clientship not as Interceder but Defender They have betaken themselves to his Tuition and desire to honour and serve him God will therefore take part with them against their Enemies He doth not only hear pleas and debates on either side but interposeth as the Patron and chief party concerned in the strife and having withal the Power of a Judge will pass Sentence on their behalf and see it executed 2. The manner of Gods pleading it is not a Verbal or Vocal but a Real and Active Plea God pleadeth not by Words but by Deeds by his Judgments and powerful Providence righting the wrongs done to them For since as I said there concur in God the Relations of Iudex and Patronus he maketh the one serviceable to the other as their Patronus he owneth the cause taketh it upon himself as the answerable party and then useth his Judicial power in defence of his People Now the property of a Judge is to pronounce sentence and then to put his sentence in Execution God hath pronounced sentence in his Word and he puts the sentence in Execution in his Providence and that is Gods Pleading Many times there is sententia lata but dilata long ago was sentence past but it is not speedily executed Eccl. 8. 11. Because sentence is not speedily executed upon an evil doer therefore do they vaunt and insult over his People as if God had forsaken and disclaimed them and would never more own their cause and quarrel but when God seeth fit to appear and to shew himself in this mixt Relation of Judge and Patron the World will have other thoughts of their Cause and therefore Isa. 3. 13. The Lord standeth up
therefore will be worshipped in Spirit and Truth Iohn 4. 23 24. 'T is agreeable to his spiritual Nature therefore shows and fashions have little respect with him but reality and substance for he searcheth the Heart and tryeth the Reins 't is not the bowing the body so much as the humble affectionate reverence and submission of the soul. God hath appointed service for the Body and so far as God hath appointed it we must submit to it but chiefly for the soul our Worship must be chiefly inward flowing from Grace ingaging the Heart in Gods service Bodily exercise is of little profit that Worship which is most agreeable to Gods nature is most pleasing to him he hath not eyes of Flesh and seeth not as man seeth Iob 10. 4. Therefore external duties without the inward exercise of the Spirit is scarce worthy the name of Worship to God He is not taken with the pomp of Ceremonies and external Observances 1 Sam. 16. 7. For man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord looketh on the Heart Men are taken with external pomp and formalities they suit with their fleshly natures but the more spiritual the more suitable to God That which you do be it in Worship 't is not done unto God but unto men when the Heart is not in it Col. 3. 23. And whatsoever ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not unto men Without the Heart all that we do is but a mocking of God giving him the shell without the kernel 3. Because the soul is the principal thing that swayeth the body and stirreth it up to all that it doth it being of itself a senseless block it followeth the disposition and inclination of the Heart I shall make it good in two Considerations First 'T is Fons actionum ad extra And Secondly 'T is Terminus actionum ad intra 'T is the Fountain of all actions that go outward from man towards God and the subduing the Heart to Gods Will is the end of all operations inward from God towards man First Fons actionum ad extra The Fountain of all actions that go outward from Man towards God all natural actions proceed from the Soul or Heart 'T is not the Eye that seeth nor the Ear that heareth nor the Hand that toucheth nor the Feet that walketh 't is the Soul seeth by the Eye and heareth by the Ears and toucheth by the hands and walketh by the Feet So in all moral actions the heart is all Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy Heart with all diligence for out of it are the issues of Life All our actions proceed thence all the evil that we do cometh from the Heart Matth. 15. 19. Out of the Heart proceed evil Thoughts Murthers Adulteries Fornications Thefts False Witness Blaspemies all that we speak and think and do followeth the frame of the Heart This is the burning furnace from whence the sparks fly the occasion of sin may be without but the cause of it is ever from the Heart 'T is the Heart that filleth the Eyes with Wantonness Pride and Fury and the Tongue with Blasphemy Slanders and Detraction the hands with blood So for good Actions Thoughts they come out of the good Treasury of the heart Matth. 12. 35. A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things The tapp runneth according to the Liquor wherewith the vessel is filled that a man hath laid up in his heart that he layeth out in his Thoughts and Speeches and Actions 't is the heart that enliveneth all our duties and we act ever according to the constitution of our Souls 2dly 'T is Terminus actionum ad intra all Actions inward the aim of it is to come to the heart The senses report things to the phantasie the phantasie represents them to the mind that counsels the heart so in Gods operations upon us his business is to come at the soul Wherefore doth he speak and reason and plead but that we may hear And wherefore do we hear But that Truth may be lodged in the heart or Soul Prov. 4. 4. Let thy Heart keep my Precepts let thy heart receive my Words Ay then Gods Word hath its effect upon us we are never subdued to God till the heart be subdued the Word for a while may stay in the memory and 't is good when the memory is planted with the seeds of knowledge as Children receive the Principles of Religion in Catechismes but the end is not there at length they exercise their Understandings about them when they begin to conceive of what they learned by rote and aftewards they begin to have a Judgement and a Conscience These Truths begin to stir and awaken them but it must not rest there neither it soaketh further and wisdom entereth upon the heart Prov. 2. 10. Ay that was Gods aim to bring the work thither and then the cure is wrought with man Rom. 6. 17. Ye have obeyed from the heart that form of Doctrine which was delivered to you So this is the end of all the operations of Grace that the soul and heart may keep Gods Testimonies so where is it that Christ would dwell when he taketh up his abode and residence in us the Apostle will tell you Eph. 3. 17. That he may dwell in your hearts by faith Till he get possession of the heart all is as nothing he will not dwell in the body only that is the Temple of the Holy Ghost at large there is an Holy of Holies a more inward place where he will dwell he will not dwell in the Tongue or in the Brain Memories or Understandings unless by common gifts But the Heart the Will and Affections of Man are the chief place of his residence there he dwelleth as in his strong Cittadel and from thence Commandeth other Faculties and Members So that the heart is the beginning and ending of the whole work of Religion from thence come all holy actions and thither tend all holy gracious operations 4. 'T is thy hearty Soul-service that will only bear weight in the ballance of the Gospel there may be many defects in the action yet if the heart be right God will accept the Will for the Deed and you will find Comfort in that another day when you most need it Isa. 38. 3. Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart Hezekiah had his infirmities and failings but his heart was upright Heb. 13. 18. Willing in all things to live honestly that 's a Gospel good Conscience and will yield comfort to you God accepts the Will without the Deed but never the Deed without the Will Infirmities may overtake the action but when the heart is unfeignedly set to serve God we shall be accepted We allow grains to true but not to counterfeit Gold the Church pleadeth Isa. 26. 8. The desire of our soul is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee When we follow
was not hearty and durable but only formal and Temporary 2 Because they take all occasions to inlarge themselves out of the stocks of Conscience and as soon as their fear is worn off away go all their Religious Pangs and thoughts of the other World and care about it How often is this verisied by daily Experience Many that were frightned into a course of Religion went on from Duty to Duty out of a Fear of being Damned but their Hearts were another way but afterwards they cast off all when they have sinned away these Fears As Herod feared Iohn and afterwards put him to death Mark 6. 19 20. Yea all the while they did good they had rather do otherwise if they durst and therefore did but watch the occasion to fly out 3 Because men of this frame dispute away Duties rather than practice them and are quarrelling at those things which the new Nature would sufficiently incline them unto if they had it In the New Testament God much trusts Love and the number and length of Duties is not stated so exactly because where the Love of God prevaileth in the Heart men will take all occasions of glorifying God and edifying themselves But when men quarrel How do you prove it to be my Duty to do so much and to give so much when the Duty its self is instituted Love will make God a reasonable allowance and not stand questioning how do you prove it to be my Duty to pray so often in my Family or in secret or hear so many Sermons which our constant necessities do loudly call for Men that have a love to a thing will take all occasions to enjoy it or be conversant about it and a willing heart is liberal and open to God and is rather disputing the restraint than the Command how do you prove it is not my Duty and is loth to be kept back from its delight 3. Some do good out of Craft and Design there is some By-end is the cause as Iehu was not so much Zealous for God as his own Interests 2 King 10. 16. And our Lord telleth us of some that make long Prayers to devour Widows Houses Matth. 23. 14. made Piety a colour and pretext to Oppression and that they might be trusted took as a shew of great Devotion And of this strain were those that followed Christ for the Loaves Ioh. 6. 20. To be fed with a Miracle and to live a life of sloth and ease God never set any good thing afoot but some temporal Interest grew upon it with which men were swayed more than with what belongeth to God Use. II. Is to perswade you to choose Gods Precepts I have chosen thy Precepts said the man of God To this end I shall give you both Motives and Directions Motives why you should choose them and then Directions in what manner things are to be attended upon in your choice First For the Motives 1. Choose them because they are Gods to whom you are indebted for Life Being and all things Shall we not obey him that made us and in whom still we live move and have our being We are debtors to him for all that we have and truly we cannot have a better Master He was angry with his People that when the Beasts would own their Benefactors that his People would not own him from whom they had all things Isa. 1. 3. The Brute-beasts the dullest of them the Oxe and the Ass are willing to serve those that feed them and pay a kind of gratitude and shall not we own God Every day your health strength and comforts come out of his hands so every nights Rest and Ease and after this can you sin against God that keeps you by Night and by day 2. These Precepts are all holy just and good What is it the Lord requires of you but to love him and serve him and fear him and forbear those things which hurt the Soul thus he speaks to Israel Deut. 10. 12. Surely these commands are not unreasonable nor grevious You dare not say sin is better that it is more profitable to please the flesh and to wallow in and seek after worldly things O why then dost thou not choose Gods Precepts before the work which Satan would put thee upon for these Precepts commend themselves by their own Evidence 3. In keeping them there 's a great deal of benefit 1. For the present there 's a deal of Comfort and Peace to be be found in the ways of God If there were no reward of Heaven yet there 's such comfort and peace that attends holy living even as heat from the fire that certainly this should draw our choice All her ways are ways of pleasantness Prov. 3. 17. And again the Prophet tells you the fruit of righteousness is peace A man that doth evil hath a sting in his Conscience and a wound in his own Soul But every good action is followed with a Serenity of Mind and an approbation from the heart of him thar doth it Nay you shall not only have Peace but Joy in the Holy Ghost for if you walk in the fear of God you walk in the comforts of his Spirit Acts 9. 31. And the Kingdom of God stands in Righteousness and Peace ay and a distinct Priviledge Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. What 's the difference between Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Peace is a Tranquility of mind resulting from the rectitude of our actions but this joy is an impression of the comforting Spirit This Joy it hath God for its Author he puts it into our hearts therefore it will more affect us then the bare Act of our natural faculties Peace it is an acquittance from Conscience but Joy in the Holy Ghost it is and Acquittance from God who is our Supream Judge and is the beginning of that endless joy which he hath prepared for them that love him in Heaven 2. For the future and final reward that is great and glorious indeed Surely the Glory of the Everlasting Kingdom should invite us to choose Gods Precepts whatever it may cost us to keep them for in choosing Holiness you choose Life and in choosing the ways of God you choose the heavenly inheritance which is the certain end and issue of them So Prov. 8. 35 36. Whoso findeth me findeth Life and obtaineth favour of the Lord But he that sinneth against me wrongeth his own Soul all they that hate me love death Christians when you are about choosing these are the terms propounded to you and they should be seriously weighed by us Evil and Death Good and Life will you choose Sin and Death or Holiness and Life Is the Pleasures of the Flesh for a few hours better then the endless Joy of the Saints If you believe Heaven and hell as you profess to do why should you stand demurring are you content to be thrust out from the presence of the Lord with the Devil and his Angels into unquenchable
make this Petition to God to beg his watchful Providence and Shepherd-like care over us and we may do it with Encouragement to be heard of God if our Hearts are unfeignedly set to keep his Law that God will hear us and keep us from our wandring Doctrine That a Christian that is obedient for the main yet may run into many Faylings and Errors of Life David was right for the main course of his Life he professeth here he did not forget Gods Precepts he did not cast off the Yoak of his Law but yet in particular acts he acknowledgeth he did erre and fail and went astray like a lost Sheep And so many who are Gods own Servants that do not forget his Precepts may thus erre and go astray First In our Natural Estate man is of a straying nature apt to turn out of the way that leadeth to God and true happiness The Holy Ghost sets forth the Degeneration of Man-kind by the similitude and embleme of a strayed or lost Sheep Luke 15. and Isa. 53. 6. All we like Sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way Mark he speaks of our Estate by Nature Collectively and Distributively Collectively and in Common All we like Sheep have gone astray And distributively Every man to his own way We all agree in forsaking the right way of pleasing and enjoying God but we disagree as each one hath a by-path of his own Some are running after this Lust Some after that and so are not only divided from God but divided from one another whilst every one makes his own Will his Law quiequid velit licet As the Channel is cut so corrupt Nature in every one finds an Issue and Passage Psal. 14. 3. They are all gone aside they are altogether become Filthy there is none that doth good no not one Some run this way some that way some are enslaved by Pleasures others are captivated by the Honours of the present World and some are opprest by the Cares of this Life Every man hath his way of sinning and running away from God But however the Emblem and Similitude of the Holy Ghost is to be considered that our departing from God and his ways is like the straying of a sheep what doth that note 1. In general it implies this that we are brutish in our sin and defection from God led by sense fancy and appetite and therefore our Condition could not be exprest but by a Comparison fetched from the Beasts Silly Sheep are carried away by their fancy and appetite from the Flock Psal. 49. 12. Man being in Honour abideth not he is like the Beasts that perish that is he abode not in the Honour of his Creation some would render it for a Night Adam abode not for a Night What we translate Man is Adam the excellency and dignity wherein God had set us he became like a Beast How is man like a Beast we are governed by our Sences and lower Appetites The Sences are grown masterly and inordinate so eagerly set upon their Objects that they will not be reclaimed and mans Life just like that of the Bruits it is things of the same nature we value and adhere unto Terrene and Earthly things the Comforts of the Animal Life and as we have the same objects so the same ends to enjoy our sensual pleasures and satisfy our Fleshly Minds as long as we may now what is this but to suffer the Beast to ride the Man to put Reason and Conscience in Vassallage and Subjection to Sense and Appetite 2. This Similitude is used to shew our proneness to erre There is no Creature more prone to wander and lose its way without a Shepherd then the Sheep Sheep are Creatures subject to straying if they be not kept in the Pasture so all Men are obnoxious to Erring and Straying Ier. 14. 10. They love to wander it s a delight to us to be pleasing our Flesh and gratifying our Carnal Senses So Psal. 95. 10. It s a People that do erre in their Hearts We do nor only erre in our Minds but erre in our Hearts To erre in our Mind is to erre out of Ignorance but to erre in our Heart is to erre out of Sensual Obstinacy so are we carryed away with the Desires of the Flesh think our selves never better then when we run away from God Ah the best of us is soon out of the way If God takes off his Guidance and leaves us to our selves we are apt to Transgress the Bounds wherewith God hath hedged up our way and make it our Business still to be running away from the Chief Good into the Bushes and Thickets of Carnal Error wherein we are entangled 3. Our inability to return and set our selves into the Right Way again for we stray like Sheep not like Swine and Dogs Swine and Dogs though they wander they will find the way home again but a Sheep is irrecoverably lost without the Shepherds Diligence and Care Ier. 50. 6. My People hath been lost they have gone from Mountain to Mountain they have forgotten their resting Place So should we run and keep running away from and forget our Resting Place I remember Austin in his Meditations hath this Passage Domine errare potui redire non potui Lord I could go astray by my self but I cannot return of my self The sheep easily straggle but it is the Shepherd must bring home the lost Sheep upon his own Shoulders Luke 15. 5. And to this we may apply that of the Prophet Hosea 13. 9 O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy help We could destroy and ruine our selves but we cannot recover and save our selves The shiftless Infant can defile himself but 't is the Nurse must cleanse it and we our selves can fall from God but to recover us to God that 's the Shepherds Care 4. It shews our readiness to follow evil Example A Sheep is animal sequax a Creature that runs after the Drove they run out of the Gap one after another and one Stragler draws away the whole Flock When the Apostle speaks of the sinful state of Man-kind Eph. 2. 2 3. He reckons up Example as one walking according to the Course of this World according to the Prince of the Power of the Air the spirit that now worketh in the Children of Disobedience In that place there 's the Devil the World and the Flesh. There 's the Prince of the Power of the Air and there 's the Course of this World that I quote it for now there 's Satan Corrupt Example and Evil Inclination all which are Depravers of Man-kind and all concurr to our ruine and destruction we easily swim with the Stream and the Torrent of Common Example do as others do and so mutually propagate and receive taint from one another Imitation is not the Whole Cause of Sin but Propagation and Inclination of Nature yet Imitation and Example doth much to the perverting of the World
p. 56 402 403. why we must obey without delay p. 402 403. Great Mischief of delays 405. Causes of these delays p. 408 409. Heynousness of the sin of Delaying ibid Delays as well as denials are painful p. 121 Delaying Mercy is not denying mercy p. 167 168 Why God delays Mercy ibid. Delays of God in making good the promises proceed not from Ignorance nor forgetfulness nor mutability nor Impotency p. 324 Delay in helping and delivering discourageth Gods Children p. 549. God may delay so long till 1. The Enemies be proud 2. A land wasted p. 549 Delays of spiritual Mercies sharpen desires p. 912 914 Deliberation in sinning a great Aggravation of sin p. 21 Deliberate sin charg'd on David when many others were omitted p. 739 740 Delight in worldly things as our portion is a main branch of Covetousness p. 254 255 Delight in Gods word what it is why the word is so delightful p. 84 85 95 96 Delight in Gods Word the property of Saints p. 593 885 Delight in Gods Testimonies an evidence that we have made them our Choice p. 741. Trial whether we delight in his Testimonies p. 87 88 89 95. how we are to delight in them p 96. Reasons for delighting in them 96 97. Uses p. 98. Exhortation to it Means to get it p. 98 99 593. It puts us upon prayer for Grace and gives us hope to speed in our prayer p. 244 Delights spiritual and carnal distinguished p. 149 1084 150. Promises to be delighted in before fulfill'd p 10 Delight in Gods Commandements the Causes of it 1. Suitableness 2. Possession 3. A precedent love of the Object p. 885. What is necessary to delighting in Gods Commandements p. 245 Delight its effects 1. Enlarging the heart 2. It causeth thirsting after more p. 886 245 Delight spiritual it's Objects perfect p. 886. Examine whether we have this delight p. 886. 1. By the extent 2. Effects 3. It s perpetuity 4. By comparing these delights with those in sensible things ibid. Delight true only to be had in God p. 386 Deliverance to be sought for in Prayer p. 921 922 It engageth us to Gods Service p. 924 Demerits in the best of Saints p. 839 Deliverance from the power of sin as well as from guilt p. 913 Deliverance when pleaded for we must get 1. Right Principles 2. Right Ends what they are p. 860. It is lawful p. 970 Deliverance will come in due time p. 558 Natural to desire deliverance p. 1083 Deliverances apt to be forgotten when danger is over p. 791 Deliverance two ways p. 737 Denial we are to pray against denials and delays p. 914 Dependancies Carnal God weans his People from them p. 143 645 Dependance on God a condition of those that expect Counsel from him in straights p. 155 769 Dependance on God better than Carnal reaches p. 645 It is a great duty p. 324 1105 Dependance on God never disappointed p. 831 Dependance on God what it implies 1. Committing our selves to his Care 2. Submitting to his Will 3. Waiting his Leisure p. 346 347 Departure from God twofold p. 669. Reasons of it ibid. Desire its proper object Holiness p. 303. how to awaken them p. 309 Desire moderated towards earthly things by considering their Vanity p. 617 Desire of Holiness the Character of Saints and why p. 29 30 901. God will satisfie it ibid. 304 Strong desires a Cause why Saints press after Gods Word p. 901 Desire what it is p. 121 897 303 304 1087. It denotes the absence of the good desired p. 885 897 1087 Desires of the godly and the wicked distinguished-p 30 Unactive desires come to nothing p. 31 Desire of man either 1. after Truth or 2. Immortality p. 623. Several sorts of desires evil p. 305 Desires vehement sweeten enjoyment p. 912 Excellency of vehement desires after spirituals p. 898 901. How to get these desires p. 901 902 Desertion the kinds of it Reasons and Causes of it p. 48 49 925 It is either 1. in appearance or 2 in reality-p 925 Desertion the greatest of sufferings p. 148 Two special sins the Causes of Desertion 1. Too much liberty in Carnal things 2. Laziness in spiritual things p. 925 Design to do good out of Design is evil p. 1076 Despair in our selves not in God p. 29 Despised Christians are despised by Men when brought low by God p 869 Despising Christs little ones a great sin p. 519 520 Despised Saints are highly honoured by God p. 554 870 Despised the common Lot of Saints to be so p. 869 Despisers of Gods Word who they are p. 1001 Despondency an ordinary evil in sharp and tedious Afflictions p. 556 Despondency reproved p. 159 792 Destruction no Creature can desire its own Destruction p. 1095 1096 Determination an Act of the Judgment p. Devil works much on the Concupiscible and Irrascible faculty p. 1031 Devil a great Enemy to us in hearing the Word 1. By Diverting us 2. By raising prejudices 3. By furnishing us with excuses evasions delays c. p. 68 Devil not to be believed p. 411 Vid. Satan Devil seeks to weaken our opinion of Gods goodness p. 440 Devisers of Reproaches and Calumny p. 299. 300 Devices of the Heart of Man p. 759 Devoting our selves to God 1. Entitles us to the Comforts of the Gospel 2. Engages us to all the Duties of it p. 915 Difference of Judgment causeth discord p. 528 Difference between men and men 〈◊〉 free grace p. 647 Difference between the delights of the Godly and the wicked p. 149 Difference between the service of God and all other services p. 850 Different measures in them that are Converted p. 604 Difference made by God in Common judgments p. 805 Difference between good and evil is real p. 939 940 Difference in things call for different affections p. 85 Difference between carnal and regenerate and the regenerate and themselves p. 673 674. 689 Difficulties broken through by the Promises p. 880 Difficulties in Scripture though it be light yet no discoument to us in searching it p. 696 697 Dig a Pit what that expression imports p. 559 Diligence in obeying Gods Commandements required p. 26. Reasons of it p. 26 27 Diligence wherein it lies p. 27 28. 638 Diligence in Prayer makes it a business p. 920 Diligence 1. In observing 2. improving afflictions p. 487 Direction of God general and particular p. 31 Direction literal and effectual p. 32. 841. God must be depended on for Direction Reasons of it 1. The blindness of our minds 2. The forgetfulness of our Memories 3. The obstinacy of our hearts p. 32. 240 Direction 1. For general choise 2. Particular actions p. 692 693 Direction sufficient from Gods Word p. 40 41. 629. 690 691 692 Direction necessary from God to him that would keep in with God p. 152. 240 Direction how to carry our selves till deliverance comes a great mercy p. 842. Why p. 842 843 Direction An act of the Judgment p. 449 Disappointment of Wicked mens