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A13538 Dauids learning, or The vvay to true happinesse in a commentarie vpon the 32. Psalme. Preached and now published by T.T. late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge. To which is prefixed the table of method of the whole Psalme, and annexed an alphabeticall table of the chiefe matters in the commentarie. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1617 (1617) STC 23827; ESTC S118153 314,670 466

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crooked a good signe of a right heart is to descrie and discouer but not without true sorrow and griefe the crookednesse and hypocrisie of it and to labour to correct and reforme it Psal. 119. 80. Let my heart be vpright in thy statutes that I bee not ashamed a right line shames a crooked crooked legges are ashamed to bee seene when a man feares and is ashamed of his hypocrisie and crookednesse and euer tendeth to straightnesse it is a good note of some rightnesse of heart Thirdly consider the things which flow from the heart if they be single and pure warrantable and right then a man may know his heart is vpright for such as the fruit is such is the tree if thou feedest on forbidden fruit thou art a bad tree and thy heart farre from vprightnesse an vpright heart suffereth not rotten speeches in the mouth idlenesse in the hand iniustice in the life drunkennesse in the braine and disorder in the course Fourthly consider the ends and aimes of our actions the vpright heart aimeth directly at Gods glory in all things but the crooked heart propoundeth euer some crooked end and sinister respect vnto good actions as many come to Church get knowledge and professe Religion for vaine glorie and vaine ends some thrust among godly persons and into good companie not because they are good or would be good but because they would be thought so Fiftly consider if thy heart be the same in priuate as it would be thought in publike Psal. 101. Dauid will walke wisely in the perfect way in the midst of his house and the conuersation of the Saints hath beene alwayes like it selfe Abraham walked in vprightnesse before God according to the Commandement Gen. 17. 1. how did he reforme his house teach his familie instruct his seruants and take God with him in prouiding a wife for Isaac and in all things Gen. 24. 63. Isaac was the same in the field as he was in the house he went out into the field to pray saith the Text. Daniel was the same after the dangerous Law that he was before he opened his windowes thrice a day as he was accustomed So vpright was Paul in his whole course as he knew nothing by himselfe 1. Cor. 4. 4. A good heart sets God often in sight as well in the Chamber as in the Church Dauid set the Lord euer in his sight and at his right hand It is as seuere and zealous against his owne crookednesse as any other and will not swallow small sinnes no more then great seeing Gods pure eyes are set vpon and against both Vprightnesse is in euery thing alike without and within it is not worse in substance then in shew nay it is better It seekes to approue it selfe before God and al men first to God whose eye is more respected then if all the world looked on and then to all men but so as if none but God looked on them It desireth to purge it selfe from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and to grow vp to full holinesse in the feare of God That man that findes these notes in him may be a glad man nay he must be a glad man according as it followes in the Text Be glad yee righteous from the connexion of the persons to this duetie we may note that Only the godly man can truely reioyce with sound and lasting ioy Isa. 65. 13. My seruants shall reioyce and yee shall be ashamed my seruants shall sing for ioy of heart and yee shall crie for sorrow of heart and howle for vexation of spirit The stranger shall not enter into his ioy Prou. 14. 10. and it is called the ioy of Gods people Thus the Scriptures euer limit this ioy to the faithfull Psal. 40. 16. Let them that seeke the Lord reioyce and Prou. 29. 6. In the transgression of an euill man is his snare but the righteous doth sing and reioyce The reasons of this doctrine are these First because none else are commanded to ioy but the godly none else haue warrant to reioyce where doe we reade that a wicked man is bid to ioy and indeed what cause is there that he should be so bid What troubles him his sinne troubles him not it is his hearts delight not temptations for he swallowes them all not his conscience for it is asleepe not the world for it is his Darling not the Deuill for he is not cruell in his owne house not outward afflictions for he will not endure any al things are at peace with him he mournes not and therefore needes not be called to comfort the promise is Blessed are they that mourne and are troubled and persecuted for the name of Christ for they shall be comforted Nay he is called from ioy to howling Iam. 5. 1. he is alreadie glutted and drowned in worldly delights and carnall ioy from which he is euerywhere called yea a woe is pronounced on him Luc. 6. 25. Woe be to you that reioyce now for yee shall mourne and weepe Secondly onely the godly haue cause to reioyce for First they only haue the presence and fruition of the chiefe good which is God himselfe and are in couenant with God by vertue whereof they are interessed in all the good things of heauen and earth as a wife in the goods of her husband Here is a great cause of ioy indeede a godly man hath gotten this cause of ioy and therefore he may lawfully reioyce Secondly they only know that their names are written in the booke of Life which is a truer cause of ioy by our Sauiours testimonie then if by the gift of miracles they were able to subdue the Deuills Luc. 10. 20. Reioyce not in this but that your names are written in the booke of Life And then the godly know their names to be written in that booke when they write their owne names in Gods booke by becomming beleeuers for faith giues them priuiledge to be the sons of God Ioh. 1. 12. Thirdly they only haue escaped and are set free from the infinite euills and sorrowes of sinne with which all other besides themselues are beset and bound ouer to damnation And therefore as Israel hauing escaped the Sea the Mountaynes and Egyptians and gotten out of Egypt it selfe sang and reioyced Exod. 15. 1. so haue all the Israel of God being set free from hell and sinne and sinners and the curse of sinne iust cause of ioy and gladnesse which all but they want Fourthly only they haue the Spirit of God the Author and Preseruer of this ioy which is therefore called the ioy of the Holy Ghost only they are anointed with the oyle of gladnesse and clothed with the garment of gladnesse and haue the Spirit of comfort sent into their soules who is the Moouer of this ioy and not so much maketh our Spirits reioyce as himselfe reioyceth in vs as he is said not to make vs make requests but to make requests in vs
came in by nature in singulos but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christi comes not but by speciall grace But now in respect of the number redeemed the benefit of Christ is lesse and so the gift is not so large as Adams fall for then all should be vessels of mercy which is most false Against which if that in Rom. 5. 18. be obiected As the offence of one came vpon all to condemnation so the benefit abounded to all to the iustification of life The answere is easie for the Apostle in the very next verse shewes who hee meanes by all namely many So by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous 2. That word all is not absolutely to be taken neither is by the Apostle but with reference vnto the limitation of the 17. verse immediately going before namely to all them which receiue the abundance of grace and the gift of righteousnes which words are an elegant Periphrasis of beleeuers who alone raigne in life through One who is Iesus Christ. 3. Whereas all is opposed to all as by the first all is meant all Adams seede by nature so by the second all must be meant all Christs seede by grace that is onely the Elect and thus the opposition is truely and aptly reconciled And thus farre haue I waded for your sakes in this deepe and graue question whom as in all other truths I wish firmely stablished against the foolish whisperings of vaine conceited and vnsettled persons who when they haue run thorow all their schismaticall Lutherane and Libertine opinions shall goe neere with many of their Leaders to end in plaine Atheisme To these I onely wish at this time humilitie and conscience The former would not permit them then onely to thinke themselues somewhat when they can cut out to their Teachers their taske as their worke to their Apprentises and define to them what doctrines are fit for them to teach and which because themselues cannot taste them are vnfit for them to meddle in The latter would fashion them to the practice of pietie according to wholsome doctrine and not suffer them to lose themselues in fond conceits farre aboue their owne apprehensions As for you who haue giuen your selues to God and vs your Ministers bee encouraged in your godly course as such who haue your hopes in your eye feare not the reproch of men or rather of Christ himselfe but stand fast and vnmoueable in the worke of the Lord as knowing your labour shall not be in vaine Walke wisely redeeming the time you haue many eyes watching for your falls especially the eye of God and your owne conscience obseruing you Account it your true honour to honour God and your honourable Profession by keeping the Doctrine receiued euen the Truth of Christ as it is in Christ and shewing your selues copies and patternes yea the very models of it by your good conuersation in Christ. Practise that great and new Commaundement the badge of Disciples by louing one another retaining those strong synewes of Christian societie Meekenesse and Mercy Consider the confusion comming vpon an house diuided against it selfe and how strong the consent of brethren is in things both of God and of men Be much and often in thankfulnesse to God for the libertie and peace of the Gospell and that you liue in the daies of such meanes and protection of them Reiect not wheat for some tares Pray to God which is all you haue to doe in things which might be better and praise him that they bee no worse Thinke the Churches peace next precious to the peace of your owne consciences And onely magnifie Truth aboue Peace because God hath magnified it aboue all things Frequent the Ministerie as Gods arme stretched out for your saluation Affect the Word not for persons but for truth not for knowledge but for conscience not for speech but for practice so as your holy obedience comming abroad you may set a Crowne vpon the heads of your Teachers who watch ouer you as they that must giue account Beware of this euill world let the holy couetousnesse after the best things eate out the hungry desires of it Account godlinesse the onely gaine the best wealth to be rich in God and the best reuenue to be abundant in good works As for the euils of the times O complaine of them to God as yee be sure the world be not the worse for you but the better as they that are going to a better world In which journey I wish you all good speed cheerefulnesse and constancie and in the end of it the hoped and happy rest of Gods people purchased by the bloud of the Lambe in whom I euer rest Yours in all Christian bands T. T. The method of the 32. Psalme followed in this Commentarie The parts of the Psalme are two 1. A generall doctrine 1. Propounded in vers 1. 2. 1. The matter of it Blessednesse 1. Cause 1. Whose wickednesse is forgiuen 2. Whose sinne is couered 3. Whose sinne the Lord imputeth not 2. Effect or fruit And in whose spirit is no guile 2. The man to whom it belongs described by the 2. Proued by the Prophets experience of two things 1. Of Gods wrath for his sinne in it vers 3. 4. 1. The touch of his conscience for sinne described by the 1. Cause While I kept close my sinne 2. Grieuousnesse by 1. Effects 1. Change in his body 1. Bones consumed 2. Moysture turned into drought of Summer 2. Roring of his voice 2. Continuance All the day long 2. The reason For night and day was thy hand on me 2. Of Gods mercy in pardoning it vers 5. where 1. The meanes Confession in which 1. The time Then 2. The ground of it I said I will confesse acknowledge not hide 3. The matter My sinne my iniquitie my wickednesse 4. The manner in respect of 1. God To thee 2. Himselfe Against my selfe 2. The end Remission And thou forgauest the iniquitie of my sinne 2. The generall vse fourefold concerning 1. Prayer in it 1. The practice where the 1. Inference Therefore by my example 2. Person praying Euery godly man shall make his prayer 3. Person to whom To thee 4. Time when In a time when thou mayest be found 2. The promise Surely in the flouds of great waters they shall not come neere him 2. Affiance in God 1. For the present Thou art my secret place 2. For time to come 1. Thou wilt preserue me in trouble 2. Thou wilt compasse me with songs of deliuerance 3. Obedience to God where three 1. A Preface to the instruction In it the 1. Person teaching I Dauid 2. Person instructed Thee euery Christian. 3. Matter in three particulars 1. I will instruct thee that is by precept 2. Teach thee the way to goe in namely by my example 3. I will guide thee with mine eye that is keepe thee in that way 2. A dehortation 1. From brutishnesse Be not like the Horse or Mule 2. Wherein 1. Vnteachablenesse Which
Spirit is another principall cause by whom God worketh godly sorrow in his children therefore he is called the Spirit of mourning and supplication and this makes both the Word and the Rod effectuall and this Spirit may bee seene in godly sorrow strengthning comforting quieting and refreshing the heart with inward ioy and contentment and bowing it to obedience Thirdly as godly sorrow comes from God so it goes to God againe and leads to God The sorrow of the prodigall Sonne after he came to himselfe made him goe to his Father with teares in his eyes and repentance in his heart and confession in his mouth I will say to him Father I haue sinned against heauen and against thee Hos. 5. 15. Surely in their afflictions they will seeke me diligently Take heede of such sorrow for sinne as driues from God if thy sorrow hinder reading prayer hearing godly conference yea if it bring thee not on thy knees and further all these though it bee for sinne it is from the Deuill for godly sorrow keepes God in sight still Fourthly it is limited by God it exceeds not the bounds of moderation sorrow for sinne may not passe measure for Gods Word doth bound it for the measure which it may not goe beyond now it is vnbounded and passeth the limits first when it vnfitteth the body or mind to good duties or to a good and chearefull manner of doing them now God loues a chearefull giuer He made the soule and body to helpe one another in his seruice and as the body must not oppresse the soule by surfetting and drunkennesse so the soule must not oppresse the body by pining and ouerthrowing the state of it Though wee must destroy the body of sinne that is the lusts of it yet we must not destroy the body of the man for that is murther and the way to runne into further sorrow Secondly when it maketh vs forget consolation Heb. 12. 5. Faint not when thou art rebuked of the Lord. Griefe for sinne must not swallow vs vp 2. Cor. 2. 7. And the reason is because that sorrow which is not ioyned with some assurance of reconciliation is sinfull and faithlesse and where this is there cannot but be consolation Heb. 12. 5. Hee speaketh vnto vs as vnto children Thirdly when it exceeds in time and wee suffer it to dwell with vs and vpon vs whereas if we sorrow for a night we must expect ioy in the morning and feare if we finde it not that it is more our owne impatiency and corruption then any other iust cause for faith in his worke still expecteth better and hopeth still Fourthly when it takes away all ioy from a Christian euen while it is present it is not godly sorrow Our commandement is Phil. 4. 4. Reioyce alwaies and againe I say reioyce Why is the Apostle so earnest in doubling this precept but because he saw this Christian reioycing so necessarie at all times as without it no good duty can be done well neither hearing nor prayer nor thankesgiuing whereof it is the ground and againe because the godly to whom the exhortation is directed for the wicked need not to be vrged to carnall ioy are so beset with trials that if they doe not still lift vp their dumpish hearts to the Lord they cannot but be ouerwhelmed But this is strange that wee must ioy euen in sorrow how can a man reioyce and sorrow at the same time Indeede carnall ioy and sorrow cannot stand together at the same time but Christian ioy and sorrow can and must for first suppose the sorrow be from without in respect of those persecutions and afflictions that the godly are beset withall euen herein they haue a signe of blessednesse a cause of reioycing and a commandement so to doe Matth. 5. 12. Paul and Silas sang in the prison the Martyrs in the flames and Iohn Baynam as if hee had been in a bed of Roses when he was at the stake Secondly if the cause be inward from sinne and corruption which is the most iust cause yet euen then Christian ioy may and must rellish a godly mans sorrow in that by the pardon of sinne hee hath escaped the wrath to come If a man for some heinous offence were ready to suffer the most exquisite torments that man could deuise if his deare friend should come with a pardon but that will not serue the turne vnlesse hee put himselfe in his place and indure all that torment for him here is cause of reioycing that he hath escaped the torment but of sorrow that by his wretchednesse his friend should be so tormented So it is betweene Christ and the Christian Or as if a man condemned to perpetuall prison for debt a suretie should bee content to sell his goods and lands to deliuer him here is ioy for his deliuerance but sorrow that he should be such a banquerupt and waster thus to vse his friend Thirdly is there not cause of ioy euen in heauinesse when the Christian heart can consider what a couenant and league of friendship he is entred into with the Lord how sweete must his loue beé to him now being a friend that so loued him when he was his enemy that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne to death for him to remooue the curse of sinne Fourthly is there not cause of ioy to thinke that now though I am troubled with sinne yet I haue the Spirit of Christ to witnesse my adoption and to seale vp to me my priuiledge to be called his sonne and to become coheire with Iesus Christ and in the meane time is euerie way mindefull of my good so free-hearted that aske what I will that is good for me I shall haue it his eare is open to heare my moane to fulfill my desires and is preparing that great glory whereby I shall in due time be like the holy Angels euer beholding the face of my heauenly Father Fifthly godly sorrow ends in God it goes not away but with sense of Gods loue and fauour whereas the other departs with ceasing of paine and change of outward things It is not the increase of corne wine or oile that can content the hart seased with godly sorrow but onely when God lifteth vp the light of his countenance vpon it Sixthly the fruit of godly sorrow is repentance neuer to be repented of that is a new life vnchangeable a returne to God not to returne againe to folly whereas hypocrites are purged and forget they are purged and so returne againe to folly By these notes try thy sorrow whether it bee godly sorrow or no. Secondly if the sorrow of the godly for sinne be not alwaies godly sorrow what shall we thinke of the wicked mans sorrow How do the vngodly deceiue themselues thinking that when they cry aloud in their paine and can speake some good words that it is repentance and that God heares them But it is as the roaring of cruell Lyons such as Esau's
this eye in the regenerate to discerne more euidently the owne estate giuen it a voice to follow the sinner with hue and cry to make him pronounce the sentence of guiltinesse and death against himselfe and all this is to iustifie God in any iudgement he brings vpon vs and to glorifie him when he brings vs out by any deliuerance But as for the wicked the eye of conscience in them is dazeled or quite put out and lets them goe on to their condemnation Fourthly a godly man must become his owne greatest enemie in confession of sinne because grace must carry a man further then nature can doe nature can make a man hate sinne but other mens rather then his owne Gen. 38. 24. Iudah thought whoredome worthy of burning as it was the custome in those dayes in his daughter in law Thamar but not in himselfe when the tokens he had left with her were brought forth then hee could confesse she was more righteous then he then away with burning whereas if shee were worthy to be burnt then much more he But grace looketh rather vpon a mans owne sinnes then anothers accounting them more venemous poysonfull odious and hate-worthy then anothers We hate all Serpents deadly yet not so much those in another countrey as these in our owne nor one that is ten foot off as that that is hard by the neerer he is the greater is our antipathie and hatred against him Now seeing euery sinne is a Serpent therefore we must hate euery one but that more especially which is neerest and vpon our hands as the Viper vpon Pauls to shake it off as he did To come now to the Vses First this lets vs see what is the nature of sinne whatsoeuer men conceiue of it they thinke not of it as of sinne if it haue either profit or pleasure with it but hold and hugge it as a sweet morsell vnder their tongue they conceiue a great sweetnesse in it whereas indeede it makes a man his owne greatest enemy If hee neuer repent it is an intolerable euill but if hee doe repent he sees that the sweetnesse of it is bitter inough such as makes him say that the pleasure of sinne is very deare and bought at too high a rate A man can bewayle any outward commoditie being lost and say as Iaacob did I haue lost this and this child all these things make against me So I haue lost such and such commoditie all these make against me but where is the man that can say Loe my sinnes these are they that make against mee But let the wise bee perswaded neuer to thinke of sinne as of a friend to fall into too familiar acquaintance with it but know that it is such an enemy as thy selfe must bee thine owne greatest enemy for it or else God will Secondly must a man set himselfe against himselfe in his confessions then this taxeth the practice of many men First of sundry who will neither deny their sinnes nor yet confesse them They wil not deny them for shame because it is against their knowledge conscience they should seeme to pull the Sunne out of heauen and deny the light of Nature if they should say they do not sinne and as for confession they will confesse none though neuer so sinfully done they deale gently with them and are loth to fall out with their friends faults they will confesse them and ouersights and infirmities which euery man hath sinnes of weaknesse though indeede of wickednesse such as are done by the strength of corruption neuer resisted Thus through ancient acquaintance they cannot leaue them they looke so amiable and louely thus they flatter themselues in sinne but if euer such come to be reconciled to God againe they must put on another person and deale in earnest against them before they can see God friendly in the pardon of them they must call a spade a spade that is confesse sinne to be such as indeed it is If the question be what is the vilest thing in the world The answere must be These sins and Who is the vilest person liuing the answere may must be Themselues Secondly others haue set colours on their sinnes that they might neuer see the hatefull and ougly face of them as First anger and hastinesse when a man is all on a sudden flame and burnes all about him for no iust cause What will he say Why it is but spirit or at worst heat of nature and he cannot do withall it is soone past ouer Well an enemy to his sinne would conclude it to be spirit indeede but an euill one and an heate which is kindled from the fire of Hell Secondly excessiue pride though men out-runne their degrees and out-weare all fashions in attiring themselues most immodestly so that a man may read in broad letters and great characters the lightnes of a light mind yet they say it is but ornament or complement or at worst the fashion An enemy now to sin would esteeme it as indeed it is a fashion vnbeseeming such as professe mortification a fashion whereof the Apostle saith Fashion not your selues according to this world and not maintaine them with Principles drawne out of the Diuels Catechisme Thirdly prodigality is but kindnes of nature couetousnes but frugalitie drinkings after the maner of the Gentiles but societie humanitie Impudency and complement but good education Luke-warmnes in religiō but good discretion policy and though Christ gaue himselfe to purchase a people zealous of good works yet it is thought a mans praise to be no meddler and to be zealous is counted nothing but to outrunne the bounds of godlinesse Thus Satan had taught the world a tricke to harden mens hearts and hinder them from sound peace and repentance Thirdly others so tender their names in their publike sins which are as manifest as a nose on a mans face as we say as they shrinke from shewing themselues in open confession against themselues and that when Gods glorie and the good of the Church yea the peace of their owne consciences calls for confession But farre are they from the affection of a zealous heart which would make them turne against themselues and their sinnes in returning to GOD. This would haue thought that Dauid should haue had more care of his credit then thus to rip vp his sinnes but Dauid was of another minde then they Fourthly those truely so called Puritanes and Catharists that need not repentance being whole men in full conformitie with the image of GOD so deifyed that they cannot sinne These are to bee branded with that odious name of Puritanes and not they that confesse their sinnes and labour to preuent them for time to come And Papists rather are true Puritans who say they fulfill the Law and need not say Forgiue vs our debts because GOD is rather indebted vnto them by their workes of supererogation let men lay the vile reproch of Puritanisme which is an
Rom. 8. 26. Fiftly only they know that Christ is theirs with all his merits and thus attayne the ioy of beleeuing He that sold all to buy the field went away with ioy that he had gotten the field So he that knowes he hath gotten Christ and groweth vp in him as a member in the head and liueth and moueth by him will reioyce in his purchase of naked Christ. How did Simeon reioyce when he had Christ in his armes How much more will a sound Christian who carries him in his heart Sixtly only they sucke and draw their ioy out of the Wells of sound consolation Isa. 12. 3. that is out of the Scriptures which are written that their ioy may be ful 1. Ioh. 1. 4. The priuiledge of Gods testimonies is that they reioyce the heart Psal. 19. 8. These make knowne to vs the things giuen vs of God these contayne the glad tydings of saluation and the precious promises of grace and glorie which belong only to godlinesse here be the deedes and conueyances of their eternall inheritance only bequeathed to children these be the Chariot of the Spirit who yeeldeth no argument of ioy and comfort but from the Word and all ioy elsewhere sought is carnall and presumptuous Seuenthly only they enioy the sweet peace and ioy of a good conscience excusing and acquitting them in the sight of God which it selfe is a continuall feast and makes them glad and cheerefull Prou. 15. 15. This was the true cause of the heauenly ioy which the Apostles in their labours and persecutions enioyed euen the testimonie of a good conscience 2. Cor. 1. 12. Eighthly only they haue the hope of glorie in soule and body which is a fruit of iustification Rom. 5. 3. and a sound cause of ioy We reioyce saith the Apostle vnder the hope of the glory of God and hope maketh not ashamed And not only this but a grounded assurance also that all things in earth which may seeme to darken their hopes shall be turned to the best Rom. 8. 28. All this may be a meanes to bring godly life in request seeing it is the only ioyfull life and none haue indeede any sound cause of reioycing but the godly And here we are to meete with two obiections which terrifie men from godly life that lyes now a dayes like refuse wares vnaskt for and vnregarded First that the world accounteth the slate of Gods children most lumpish heauie and solitarie yea most vncomfortable it thinkes that no ioy nor mirth nor pleasure of their liues belongs vnto them but if once a man beginne in truth to liue godly he must bid a dieu to all mirth and gladnesse and betake himselfe to a mopish heauinesse and sadnesse But this is a grosse and foule deceit of the father of lyes whereby he hath much aduantaged his Kingdom and by a supposed want of ioy exceedingly puts godlinesse out of countenance Yet first true it is that God helpeth and draweth Christian ioy out of godly sorrow and no man can attaine this sound ioy but hee that is soundly humbled at the sight of his sinnes and herein the World sticketh not seeing the powerfull worke of GOD who out of this darknesse bringeth light who soweth light to the righteous and out of this sorrowfull Seed-time brings forth a white Haruest of ioy Secondly because now the heart being regenerate cannot carnally reioyce as before nor in carnall things hauing better obiects and causes of ioy on which it feedeth the stranger that cannot enter into this ioy thinkes he hath no ioy at all onely because worldly ioy is vnsauourie to him in comparison of spirituall Thirdly the World and wicked men set themselues to vnsettle the peace of the godly and doe often disquiet them and will let them haue as little ioy as may bee Yet Notwithstanding all this First the godly euen when they doe not reioyce haue iust cause to reioyce else our Sauiour would not haue pronounced the mourners blessed euen for the present Blessed are they that mourne nor haue said to the Disciples In the world ye shall haue affliction but in mee yee shall haue peace Ioh. 16. 33. Secondly if they sorrow they shall out-grow their sorrow and their sorrow shall bee turned into ioy as Christ promised the Apostles Ioh. 16. 20. The redeemed of the Lord shall returne and come to Sion with praise and euerlasting ioy shall be vpon their head they shall obtaine ioy and gladnesse and sorrow and mourning shall flye away Isa. 35. 10. So Isa. 61. 3. Christ hath appointed vnto them that mourne in Sion beauty for ashes the oyle of ioy for mourning and the garment of praise for the spirit of heauinesse Thirdly our Text teacheth that God would not haue the hearts of his children at any time so possessed with sorrow no not for the most iust causes but that they must support themselues and rise out of it with heauenly and spirituall ioy to which end serue all these commandements so thicke as we say and threefold which were all idle and to no purpose if their liues were still to be led in a lumpish and sowre manner Here therefore I would aduise such as feare God to looke to two things First to prepare their hearts by fulnesse of godly sorrow to be filled with ioy seeing it riseth out of serious sorrow for sinne and out of a broken heart we tune our harpes and musicall instruments to sweete musicke by wresting the strings neither must we as we are too ready to conceiue these two as enemies destroying but rather as constitutiue and conseruing causes one of another Then secondly let Gods people bee aduised to looke into their priuiledges which are such as may well not onely affect but rauish them with ioy and consider of their happie estate and translation into the fellowship of GOD and his Saints and that for these causes first that they may yeelde obedience to Gods commandement both here and elsewhere secondly manifest the presence of the Spirite in their hearts who brings with him peace and ioy and settles the Kingdom of the euerliuing God in the heart which consisteth in these thirdly that they may not onely take away this scandall which Satan and the wicked make aduantage of but also encourage others to get part in the same grace which keepes them in a cheareful and constant course of wel-doing when they see that no trouble nor affliction can interrupt their ioy fourthly without true ioy wee can neuer praise God heartily or serue him chearefully for no ioy in God none in his ordinances none in our dueties of either of our callings but we must needes be lumpish and heauie and soone weary of our prayers and hearing the word and the speciall actions of our calling wherein if we had delight we would not easily be pulled from them but count much time imployed therein as Iaakob did an hard prentiship of many yeeres but a few dayes because of
his affection of loue and reioycing in his Rahel Another obiection which terrifies many from godly life is that the godly are so beset and compassed with troubles sometimes inward and sometimes outward in themselues and theirs in their goods names and persons as they cannot see what ioy they can haue in their liues No maruell if the world can see no cause of ioy in the godly estate especially when the Sunne and heate of persecution tanneth and discoloureth them seeing the godly themselues are often out of loue with their owne condition For First they haue a true sense of sinne and rather then they should not haue it God himselfe will hide his face from them and they are troubled Psal. 104. 2● So Dauid in the 51. Psalme had by his grieuous sinnes lost the ioy of his Saluation which hee desires the Lord to restore vnto him once againe Secondly the Church sometimes forfeits in a manner Christs presence and by vnkinde answeres makes him goe away in displeasure and then her beauty and ioy is faded and seemes blasted as plants are in the absence of the Sunne or farre distance of it Thirdly sometimes presence of naturall corruption and strength of rebellion in the heart carryes a godly man as a slaue to execute the lusts of the flesh whereby the Spirit is grieued and quenched and seemes quite gone and this is a great cause of sorrow and heauinesse of heart as we may see in Paul crying out O miserable man that I am c. But in all this there wantes not some cause of ioy First Seeing Christ goes not away but he leaues some pledge of his comming againe he puts his hand by the hole of the doore that the heart of the Church may bee affectioned towards him Cant. 5. 4. and this is that which makes her in his absence sicke of loue which argues some delight in him while he is farre off and this delight and desire after him giues her no rest till she find him againe and then shee layes better hold and makes more of him then euer before Neither doth Dauid so lose all ioy by his sinne but that hee still desires and longs after it which argues the Spirit not to bee quite gone who onely worketh such vnspeakeable groanes after himselfe in the hearts of such as he hath once taken for his mansion Secondly the ioy of the godly is often ouercast with the mist of affliction and this dazles their owne eyes that sometimes their ioy is hid from themselues and much more from others But as it is in the heauens when a cloud hinders the sunne-beames or the interposition of the earth makes an eclipse for a time but afterward the Sunne shal breake out and shine gloriously so is it heere first the promise is Yee shall weepe for a time but your sorrow shall bee turned into ioy and your hearts shall reioyce Ioh 16. 20. Secondly afflictions from the world for well-doing cast not ioy out of a godly heart but feede it Iam. 1. 2. My brethren count it all ioy when yee fall into diuers afflictions and 1. Pet. 1. 6. Wherein yee greatly reioyce though now for a season if neede bee yee are in beauinesse The Apostles therefore reioyced when they were whipt and set in the stockes and vsed like rogues for Christs sake and the Saints reioyced in tribulation and suffered with ioy the spoyling of their goods Hebr. 11. Thirdly those afflictions were comfortlesse and iustly to be sorrowed for which could separate vs from God and from Christ the onely fountaine of our true ioy but all afflictions helpe the godly neerer vnto God and Christ working repentance feare shame and remorse for sinne and reconciliation and so helpe our ioy Thirdly the godly haue oftentimes lesse comfort of their life then needes because they mistake their estate two wayes especially First when they are not able to distinguish between nullytie and imperfection of grace Oh they finde no faith in their hearts no feare no brokennesse of heart when they I will not say belye the Spirit but vnthankefully deny his worke in themselues I grant heere is imperfection of these graces but that they are quite shaken out where euer they were in trueth is not to be graunted Secondly when they will measure their estate by sense and not by faith whereas faith stands not by sense and feeling but is a secret force beyond these A man in a swoone or in a sleepe feeles not his life and yet is a liuing man and a sounder man if the qualme or sleepe bee ouer it is one thing to haue grace another to feele grace one thing the life of faith another the life of sense Fourthly the godly are often too hastie and loth to stay their time of preparing to their glory this troubles them much that God delayes them so long they feare he hath vtterly forgotten them But hee that beleeues makes not haste and Marke the iust man his end is peace not alwayes his beginning If God delay long yet he will come at last let thy faith grow in strength and thy ioy shall be abundant thou shalt not feare but that as in Sampsons Parable out of the eater shall meat come and out of strong afflictions sweetnesse By all which we may see the blindnesse of the World that can see nothing at all in the godly life worth the taking vp and who to auoyd the troubles of godly men refuse to partake in their ioyes which are so sure and sweete as that no affliction or sorrowes can befall them in which they may not reioyce if it be not by their owne default But let the godly themselues reioyce in their portion that God hath seuered them from the base brats and Ismaels of the World whom hee sends away with some gifts but hath bestowed the peculiar liueli-hood of his owne Isaacs vpon them Let them bee glad in the euils they haue escaped in the good procured them within and without them here and hereafter the least dramme of which hath more true cause of ioy in it then if they were heires of the World Secondly see hence the vnhappy estate of vnrighteous men seeing they are without all found ioy or cause of it for First what ioy can he haue that is a dead man dead in sinne without the life of God without Christ the fountaine of life and ioy surely a dead man that lyes rotting in his graue hath as much cause of ioy in that estate as he that is dead in sinne hath in his Secondly what ioy can hee haue in GOD whose conscience continually vexeth and accuseth him in whom the spirit of feare and bondage ruleth which keepes and barres out peace with God and much more the ioyes of the Holy Ghost A sound of feare is euer in his eares Iob. 15. 20. True it is a wicked man may labour to forget the troubles that haunt him or to brawne his heart not to