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A00980 The way to blessednes a treatise or commentary, on the first Psalme. By Phinees Fletcher, B. in D. and minister of Gods Word at Hilgay, in Norfolke. Fletcher, Phineas, 1582-1650. 1632 (1632) STC 11085; ESTC S102384 208,041 304

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justice when hee judged the cause of the afflicted and poore hee prospered was not this because hee knew mee saith the Lord Settle this then in thy heart the Lord promiseth and the Lord shall make it good 5. Let us then bee exhorted in the words of God himselfe to Ioshua Let not this booke of the law depart out of thy mouth meditate therein day and night that thou mayest obserue and doe all that is written therein or of this dying Prophet to his Successour and Sonne Salomon Take heed to the charge of the Lord to keepe his testimonies and commandements as it is written c. Say unto the Lord Oh my Saviour hast thou made thy yoake so easie and thy commandements so farre from grievous and shall not I take it joyfully upon me hast thou promised prosperitie and happinesse to all that beare it and should I refuse it Say unto thy soule aske and enquire of the Saints and with one voice thou shalt heare them testifie Thy word is more sweet then hony more precious then all riches more necessary then our daily food the joy and rejoycing of their heart a rich portion helping thee to that most rich inheritance of glory a joyfull Guide leading to joyes unspeakable and glorious and shall not I cleaue unto it that I may prosper Let great men seeke wealth by oppression the meaner by fraud and imposture flatterers by fawning Epicures by surfeiting in riot and pleasure but oh my God I will follow thy way in thy word looke my soule looke unto that Guide and depart not from his direction and it will cause thee to prosper and conduct thee to that eternall rest and peace the end of all thy ends and the onely true prosperitie Psalme I. Verse iiij The ungodly are not so but as the chaffe which the winde driveth away TRue is it that one contrary will not a little illustrate another In colours when blacke and white in our estate when miserie and felicitie are compared together their proper nature will more evidently appeare to any who will heedfully obserue it Therefore when in the former verses the Spirit had set out the godly both in their course and successe in these verses he describes the condition of the wicked that so both their estates may more cleerely bee discerned by those who will with any diligent eye consider it ayming both to this end that as the happinesse of the one might allure and winne us to the same practice so the miserie of the other might affright and driue us from the evill way This misery of ungodly men is liuely pourtrayed and set out to the eye from the contrary and 1. By negation of all that blessednesse mentioned in the former verses in which the godly are instated by the Lord even in this present life 2. By a contrary curse and that curse expressed 1. by a comparison of chaffe 2. by the consequent and conclusion of all wicked courses in the 5. verse The negatiue argument propounding the contrary estate of wicked persons includes all these Propositions 1. The Spirit and Prophet affirmeth that a wicked and ungodly man is not blessed 2. The same Spirit concludeth that a wicked man is not a planted and watered tree 3. The Prophet testifieth that ungodly persons are not as a fruitfull tree ever flourishing 4. The Lord by the Prophet assures us that an ungodly man shall not prosper in all his wayes The first then is this The Spirit and Prophet affirmeth that a wicked and ungodly man is not blessed The words haue before beene opened sufficiently and the meaning of them is briefly this Whosoever delights not nor meditates in the word but rather with pleasure followes the counsell of ungodly persons walking in their disobedience and scorning neither is nor can be happy in this estate The proofe is evident and frequently confirmed there is no peace saith the Lord to the wicked Esay 48. 22. and againe 57. 21. And the curse continually applied to them in Scripture The grounds are 1. the justice of God who cannot by any meanes cleere the guilty 34. 7. The Lord is knowne by the judgement which hee executeth the wicked is snared in the worke of his owne hands Psal. 9. 16. 17. Vpon the wicked God shall raine snares stormes and tempests Psalme 11. 6. 2. The very nature of blessednesse for blessednesse is that estate wherin we enjoy good without evil or at least a measure of good out-weighing evill but wickednesse considered of it selfe without the punishment due to it is to a man such an evill as weighs downe any good hee possesseth in this life as being most cont●ary to his nature in which he was created and to his end unto which he was ordained Learne here 1. That the happinesse of man consisteth not in the fruition of any one or all outward blessings nay some inward and some spirituall also may be cast in to a wicked man and hee still continue most wretched Should riches honour power glory pleasure bee all heaped upon one man in that measure his owne heart desired should wisedome courage health strength beautie and other such endowments of body and mind be added to the other nay the word Sacraments and some illightnings c. bee adjoyned all these could not make up this blessed estate nor seat this man in a throne of happinesse necessarily this followes for all these things may belong to a man drown'd in sinne and hellish wickednes who contemnes and hates the word of God and God himselfe and therefore cannot bee blessed But because this truth doth not easily sinke into flesh and blood it will be needfull as well by evident testimonie of God to confirme it as by reason also and experience to settle it in our mindes First therefore God testifieth of these things that they are not worthy our rejoycing Let not the rich man rejoyce in his riches nor the strong man in his strength nor the wise man in his wisedome but let him that rejoyceth rejoyce in this that hee under standeth and knoweth mee where purposely the Lord chuseth out such blessings as being of all naturall things most excellent comprehend the rest By riches which are most embraced by earthly men he intends all the goods of estate in strength all bodily in wisedome all gifts of the mind are included yet in all these we may not rejoyce or glorie but only in the knowledge of God Many spirituall gifts may also be annexed to the former as some knowledge some kinde of faith baptisme whereby we are entred into the Church yet all these meeting in one man cannot giue him this happines Simon Magus beleeved was baptized yet still was drowned in the very gall of bitternesse No testimonie can bee of more or equall force then that of Salomon whom God purposely called out from the sonnes of men as the foreman of all the Iurie to giue in his verdite
any man he driues him th●ough all the degrees of sinne carries him headlong and suff●rs him not to stoppe unlesse the Lord over-rule him till hee bee plunged in the bottomlesse pit Hence it is that the faithfull are first awaked and commaunded to stand up to receiue light and being once raysed and quick●ed with Christ they goe from strength to strength till they appeare all of them before the Lord in Sion They mend their speed and runne in the way of Gods commandements burning in loue they forget what is behind reach forth to that which is before presse hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus Hence is it that wicked men wax worse and worse rush into all impietie as an horse to the battell and being caught and violently driven as a ship in a storme with the tempest of their sensuall desires never stop but in eternall death So as the godly goe on from faith to vertue from vertue to knowledge from knowledge to temperance c. so the wicked man laying a foundation in ignorance buildeth upon it wilfulnesse wilfull darknesse growes up to obstinacie and hardnesse of heart hardnesse procures senslesnes want of feeling ushers into wantonnes and delight in sinne and this delight brings in greedinesse O there is in the sinfull heart of man a praecipice and strange downefall in the desire and practise of iniquitie which will not indure any stay till it be cut off by God being either stopped by his grace and turned into the good way or stroken with death and sent to their place hurried with sensualitie they cannot cease to sinne drinke iniquitie as a thirstie man water as it drawes them so they draw it with cart-ropes they will take great paines to doe ●ickedly And as a man that wilfully flings himselfe from an high rocke or steeple cannot stay but still fals and the further hee goes sinkes with more force and speed so is it with our sinfull nature altogether like those swine in the Gospell which being left to the Devill were carried by him and could not stop till they came to those steepe rockes nor stay there till they had cast themselues downe into the sea and were stifeled Obserue it in some particulars When Satan had kindled in the heart of Cain that hellish brand of anger it could not be quenched with the neerenesse of bloud and deere relation of an onely Brother till anger had enflamed it with hatred and hatred broke out into actuall murder So in Sodome fulnesse of bread or luxury breedes idlenesse idlenesse lust and lust rushes into that bestiall filthinesse against nature And would to God some remnants of this cursed disposition remained not still in the faithfull howsoever it be over-mastered by his Spirit dwelling in them and raigning for Christ. When David gaue his eyes leaue to wander in wanton lookes his eyes draw his heart to wanton thoughts and desires and his heart driues on his body to actuall uncleannesse Thus was he carried headlong to adultery adultery puls him on under pretence of saving his credit to make Vriah drunke and at length to murder him Consider this with feare and not onely know the falsenesse and cunning deceiveablenes of the heart but remember that when men even Gods chosen giue way to sinne God often suffers them to be carried down in the current of it that before they can thinke of it they are almost sunke and swallowed in death and despaire There is that vnmeasurable pride in the heart of man that it will with no great difficultie be brought to mock God in his word in his works in his Saints For as God is denied so is he derided eyther in word and open profession of Atheism or more secretly in rebellious actions proceeding from inward contempt of God As there are some which haue denied God in words through feare and weakenes which yet confessed him in their heart so are there many who professing God in their words deny him in workes being altogether abominable disobedient and to every good worke reprobate Neither are these Atheists to be found among Heathens onely but every where swarme in the visible Church of God How often doth the wisedome of God complaine of and threatens the despisers of his word How often doe the Prophets cry out of them I am in derision daily every one mocketh me the word of God was made a reproach to me and a derision daily see the manner of their skosting They say unto me where is the word of the Lord let it come now Thus Ezekiell chap. 33. 32. So likewise God is mocked in his workes by those Atheists which being foretold by the Apostles wee see daily walking after their lusts Numberles are they that mocke God in his Saints see Psal. 14. 6. and 69. 7. 9. 11. 12. It might seeme a strange and marveilous thing that even those who professe Christ should mocke him should mocke him in his word and despise his wisedome in those ordinances which himselfe appointed and commended to his Church unlesse the Spirit had shewed us the cause of it namely the naturall man discernes not the things of God but judges them folly now we know that folly is the most proper object of scorne And many hipocrites are in the visible Church who haue Lord often in their mouthes yet never in their hearts but are in deed howsoever in shew they seeme otherwise naturall sensuall and divellish Doe but obserue the ordinarie behaviour of men in this open light how common is it for men to absent themselues from the publike service of God in the Sabboth never blushing in plaine termes to prefer their owne vaine conceits before the ordinances of God affirming and maintaining that they can serue God as well at home and in the chimney corner by reading some good booke c. as in the Church by hearing the Preacher And so wilfully blind are they that they cannot see how basely in this they esteeme of Gods wisedome who continually employes his servants and commands them to be instant the wisedome of God sends them Prophets Apostles wise men c. If God send them dare wee thinke it needlesse were hee not more then fond who would send a Guide with a man who without any direction can as well come to his journeyes end How ordinary is it to draw neere to God in his word to set before him yet openly by sleeping reading nay many times talking proclaim● the contempt and scorne in which they hold that Ordinance the power of God to salvation This behaviour were intollerable toward men yet God must take it at our hand Offer such service to thy Prince and try whether he will be content with it and accept thy person If he commaund thee to attend his pleasure at the Court and sets thee a day darest thou breake day with him darest thou
sweetnes of present gaine for future promises a certainetie for an vncertaintie o● a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush With the drunkard he will plead wilt thou change thy merrie companie for such a sowre and joylesse life with the beginning Christian seest thou not all men generally goe another way seest thou not how many reproches what spight what contempt will meete thee in the face If thou takest that way never looke for good houre after all thy former credit and reputation is lost How many silly soules hath he strooke with these affrightings and drawen them head-long from their profession But if we laugh at those that are scared with a vizard how ridiculous to be amazed with such emptie shewes of evill Awake and open thine eyes and see the vanitie of these scar-crowes Thou loosest the pleasures of sinne true and is it not a pittifull thing for a swine to loose his tumbling in the mire Thou loosest thy sinfull profits and is this so woefull a matter to loose a milstone off thy necke when thou art now in a deep water Thou loosest thy credit friends no doubt a shrewd losse to misse his good word who is himself stark naught to lose a cōpanion who will bring us to the gallowes summe up thy losse thou shalt finde this is the totall thou loosest death and hell but what dost thou get nothing by this losse thou changest fading and stinking pleasures for the pleasu●es at Gods right hand thou changest earthly riches for heavenly reputation among men for the praise of God In a word thou changest vanitie and vexation of spi●it for sound and everlasting happinesse and even dung for Christ hee that winnes the whole world and looseth his owne soule makes but a fooles ba●gaine and as Deborah sings Iudg. 5. 19. get no gaine of money If you tell a true Christian that he hath a great losse in forsaking Father Mother c. he will but pitty thy ignorance when he hath already in possession an hundred fold gaine beside the certaintie of an inheritance infinitely beyond his owne thought excellent Here may divers Christians take good occasion to chide and shame themselues in their own hearts when they looke upon their sloathfulnesse in the harvest of Christ Haue we felt the sweetnesse of Christ his yoke Haue we shaken off those not more heavy then loathsome chaines of Satan doe wee feele the ease of this heavenly libertie why then doe we not call on others and invite them Tast and see how gracious the Lord is When Christ hath taken us by the hand why doe wee not catch hold on others such especially as are neere us when hee draweth us why d●aw not wee those that are linked with us in kind●ed friendship acquaintance and pull them after Though the labourers reape and binde the sheaues yet even children gleane and gather some handfuls to carry home The Minister is the workman hi●●d by God to gather in his harvest but the very weakest may by his helpe who delights to glorifie his power in infirmitie and ought in private to helpe forward and picke up some ●oo●e and straggling soules as God giues them opportun●ti●● is he a faithfull servant to the Lord of the harvest who seeing a poore soule separated from the sheaues the Church of God lying as a prey to that Fowle of the ayre will not stretch forth his hand to take it up and bring it home Hath he any charitie who suffers a weake soule bound many yeares in the prison of Satan and pressed under the burden of sin to lie still kept downe with that hellish waight and puts not to his hand to raise it should'st thou see thine enemies oxe straying wouldst thou not driue him home Sawest thou thine enemies Asse fallen under his load would'st thou not he●pe him up if thou hast loue to man thou wilt if obedience to God thou must lend him thy helpe And what shall the beast of thine enemie be more precious in thine eye then the soule of thy brother Oh canst thou thinke thy best endevours too much for that for which thy Master the Wisedome of God thought not his best bloud too good Where is thy loue What I pray thee what can be the reason why thou a parent shou●d'st beat thy braines toile thy weary and w●ake body to inrich thy children traine them up in some serviceable qualities prefer them to great bountifull persons and yet bee altogether carelesse o● very cold to stocke them in grace to bring them up in instruction of the Lord fit and commend them to his service who is not onely ready to accept them but to giue them not a corruptible living but eternall life not a poore farme but a rich inheritance to instate them with himselfe in a Kingdome of glory What is the cause that being a Husband who from deare loue to thy wife canst purhase her a joynter whereby shee may liue comfortably when thou art dead canst not draw on thy yoke-fellow to this partnership with Christ Why is it that out of loue to thy brethren allies friends and acquaintance in the flesh thou canst cheerefully shew them all civill curtesies ride runne sue and worke out some good for them mourne with them in their sorrow rejoyce with them in their prosperitie and yet thou on earth worse then Dives in hell wilt never labour to prevent that they come not to that place of eternall torment The truth is the cause of this spirituall carelesnesse is want of spiritual loue and grace Christian loue expresses it selfe in Christian duties as naturall loue in civill offices had'st thou so much as one graine of heavenly loue rooted in thy heart it would spring bud and yeelde this true fruit of doing some good It is a propertie of goodnesse to bee communicatiue of it selfe which effect is as naturall to it as to fire to warme therefore God being infinite Goodnes and working infinitely communicates himselfe even personally to his creature namely to the humanitie of Christ and hath by him united all the Elect to himselfe to bee one with him through Christ. Thus is it with those children whom he hath begotten through the word of truth in his owne likenesse they being partakers of his divine na●ure cannot but communicate it with others so farre as they are able to work and diffuse it abroad to those with whom they converse as we heard before There is no signe then of grace in that heart which doth not pitty succour as it is able the soules of their brethren which are intangled in the snare of Satan Those are here deepely censured who stop their cares against the warning of God Come out from among them and separate your selues saith the Lord as first those wilfully blind soules who having devoted themselues to that whore of Rome will not open their eyes to see her filthy nakednesse so plainely discovered by God in
for motiues consider the di●ference betwixt these conditions and estates of men excellently resembled in those two types those two Countries so contrary AEgypt and Canaan Read it set out to thee Deut. 11. 10.11 12. 2. Consider the disposition of every creature No man will refuse to flit from a dwelling in which he sees and findes many discommodities to a place wher he shall enjoy an happy estate and liue in health and plentie If thou desirest to know the meanes it is by receiving the word grafted with meekenesse Iam. 1.21 Now this meeknesse is that Christian vertue which proceeding from humilitie and being opposite to frowardnesse and stubbornnesse of heart bends and bowes our soules in all gentlenesse to the yoake of Christ as acknowledging him the just Commaunder our selues his subjects and servants Proposition 2. The second proposition in this verse drawne from the properties is Hee that delights and meditates in the word of God day night is like to a tree that bringeth forth fruit in season whose leafe shall never fade In which are two especiall things making up and accomplishing the happinesse of the faithfull soule which seekes the Lord in his word 1. The effects and fruits following this planting and watering 2. The perseverance or continuance in this estate The effects are two 1. in this life the fruit of grace 2. in the other the fruitiō of glory For I take it as certaine that the Spirit here intendeth both as well because glory is the especiall part of our blessednesse here described as also because this bringing forth fruit in season will rather agree to that perfect fruit which we receiue in glory then the other No sooner is the tree transplanted but fruit instantly followes but the perfection and full ripenesse of it is not here gathered but hereafter in heaven Some here resemble faith to the leafe but that being the speciall fruit of grace cannot fitly be thus compared The purpose of the Spirit without all question by the never-fading leafe is to expresse the ever-flourishing estate and life of the godly It is not therefore necessary to descend to any particular and in this similitude to liken any one thing in the faithfull to this leafe but sufficient that as the tree whose leafe is ever green continually flourisheth and even in the midst of winter liues and prospers so the godly in the most troublesome stormes of all tryall and tentation shall p●rsevere in this spirituall life and even then shall sucke that heavenly sap from Christ and openly flourish in an holy profession Now I see not any difficultie in these words but onely it may seeme doubtfull in what sense these f●uits of grace and glory are said to bee produced in season For that of glory the season is only knowne to God who hath put the times and seasons in his owne power and brings forth this fruit in some sooner in some later as seemes best to his owne wisedome onely this may bee observed that as the Palm● ripens his fruit not suddainely but is three yeeres longer then any tree concocting and mellowing it before it come to full maturitie so it pleaseth the Lord not instantly to ripen this fruit of his Spirit and perfect us in compleat holinesse but often by a slow progresse and no hasty growth brings us to that supreame happines and full perfection For that other fruit namely of grace ordinarily it is interpreted as opposed too those to hasty fruits which suddainely ripening and before due time are of no use but sowre and unsauorie of which we use to say in the proverbe soone ripe soone rotten Leaving to every one his owne sense so farre as it is not repugna●t to the rule of faith I doe not willingly consent to this interpretation First because I cannot easily beleeue that any spirituall fruit can either spring grow or ripen too soone and am perswaded that it is the proverbe of Satan hatched in hell A young Saint an old Divell Secondly because even that ca●kasse of faith which is in hypocrites who are the stony ground is but a blade no fruit a blade without a roote as is evident in the parable I would rather ●nderstand it as thus intended As there are many fruits of the Spirit so are they not all produc●d at one time some presently shew themselues but other some spring not till a long time after onely the seed and roote of them is in the heart but the fruit appeares not and yet in due time the fruit shall follow The sense then is this He that delights and meditates in the word shall not onely fructisie in grace and attaine in good time every good gift of the Spirit but shall certainly in Gods season grow to a further degree of ripenesse and at length to a full maturitie and glorious holinesse and this fruitfull and glorio●s estate shall not decay the fruit of grace shall not utterly perish but shall surely end in endlesse and perfect glory See for proofe Ierem. 17. 8. Thus when the word is rightly heard fruit followes Luke 8. 15. no lesse fruit springs from this seede then life yea everlasting life Iohn 4. 24. The grounds or reasons may be 1. The grace of God in electing you haue not chosen mee but I haue chosen you and ordained that you should bring forth fruit and your fruit shall remaine 2. The blessed Spirit working in it Gal. 5.22 3. The nature of the word which God hath made to be as seed now every seed hath a vertue and force to produce the like 4. The materiall and maine cause is the roote that beareth us even Christ Rom. 11. 18. see Iohn 15.4.5 Looke then as the tree such is the branch thus the Lord Iesus being full of grace which was delt unto him not by measure Iohn 3. 34. distributes to every one which is grafted into him that measure which is requisite for that part which he holds in his body Iohn 1. 16. Ephe. 4. 16. And seeing himselfe being risen from the dead dieth no more Rom. 6. 9. he giues this never-fading life to those who are his members Iohn 6. 37. 56. 57. 58. Learne then here for instruction that it is altogether impossible that soule should be barren in spirituall fruit which delights and meditates in the word of God Now as in earthly so in these heavenly fruits there are many kindes and every kind diversified into other The chiefe of the spirituall are godlinesse righteousnes and sobrie●ie In godlinesse sundry and divers particulars some which we receiue and returne not some which we both receiue and returne Of the first sort the chiefe is peace a fruit wonderfully pleasant I haue read of some fruits which haue so affected the tast that the whole body hath instantly felt a sudden alteration and even shook and shuddered with the delight it received Sure I am no fruit in earthly Paradise could compare with this peace Oh when an
and will c●rtainely set our teeth on edge Vse for motiues to stirre up thy heart and to plant it with this good fruit 1. The remembrance of the excellencie of it and that it is naturall to desire things excellent 2. Consider that they are more easily obtained then the other Conscionably use the meanes 1. the word 2. prayer Bee thou swift to heare Pray continually and thou shalt surely find thy soule to prosper and to be as a watered garden full of that fruit which cheereth God and man Proposition 3. And whatsover he doth shall prosper In these words the Psalmist propounds the most generall part of that happinesse which God withou● faile bestowes on those who meditate with delight in his word namely prosperitie amplified by the generalitie of it Whatsoever hee doth shall prosper Hence ariseth the third Proposition Whosoever with delight meditates in Gods word whatsoever hee doth shall prosper Now there is no word which needeth explication but this of prosperitie And prosperitie is nothing else but that successe in our ends which we desire and by hope expect when therfore we purpose any action to some good end and wee see our affaires sort to that end or better then we hoped then this action is said to prosper But obserue that in prosperitie either in the whole estate of man or in any one particular action is required not onely the attaining some one the immediate or middle end unlesse we reach to the principall and supreme As for instance Suppose a man sowes much that he may reape and enjoy abundance of fruits he desires abundance that he may rest and be merry if now he attaines his hopes in receiving plenty and obtaines not this rest and joy hee cannot be said to prosper in this action Thus that rich mans superfluitie prospered not with him Luke 12. 19.20 The Israeli●● longings satisfied abudantly yet cannot bee said to prosper with them Numb 11. But if we misse of the immediate and attaine the supreme end our actions prosper for he that faileth of plentie but is filled with rest and joy prospers in his purpose Prosperitie therefore may be considered either absolutely in the generall and whole estate of man or in particular when we enjoy our hopes in some or many ends which we desire and propound to our selues The sense then of this proposition is Whosoever delights and meditates in the word of God whatsoever hee setteth his hand unto shall surely haue successe in working for him that which hee desireth and hopeth at least in the maine and generall if not in the lesse and particular ends For confirmation of this point read Iosh. 1. 8. Let not this booke of the Law depart out of thy mouth but meditate therein day and night that thou mayest obserue and doe according to all that is written therein for then shalt thou make thy way prosperous and then shalt thou haue good successe and 1 King 2. 3. Take heed to the charge of the Lord to keepe his statutes and commandements that thou mayest prosper in all that thou doest and in every thing whereunto thou turnest thee The reasons or causes of this successe may be either in the word or in God In the word because it points out and leads us in the way and onely meanes of good and is that Guide which will direct us in the way to the end of it if we follow it to the end 2. In God 1. His grace and truth whereby he purposed promised and will performe it to giue assistance and shew all favour unto such 2. His infinite wisedome and power ruling and over-ruling all creatures and subduing all things to himselfe being able nay continually using to bring light out of darkenesse Oh! that men would learne from hence this certaine truth that wheresoever the word of God is rightly entertained peace and prosperitie as necessary attendants surely follow it whether into any house or Countrey Read the historie of the Scripture and you shall ever finde that as long as religion was in truth maintained among any people and the word of God set at libertie so long that Nation prospered Thus when Hezekiah Vzziah and divers other Kings were carefull to restore the truth and to advance the faithsull Ministers of God and settle them in their function they prospered wonderfully see 2 Chron. 26. 5. and 30. and 31. chapters especially the last verse of the 31. chap In all his workes c. hee did it with all his heart and prospered see also Hag. 2. 19. 20. and indeed that whole prophecie is altogether aimed to that end namely that the people may see their errour in neglecting Gods house and building their owne for all that time they prospered not but after when being admonished they set themselues cheerefully to build the Temple the Lord turned his hand and made them prosper The whole chap Deut. 28. is spent in this subject But what need we travaile to forraine Nations for witnesse to this truth when our owne Land even in our time is a strong confirmation of it To passe by the unspeakable miseries of this Land since that time wherein Popish ignorance began to creepe upon it by Picts Danes Normans and our owne civill armes obserue but the raigne of two Sisters The elder being a Papist married a Popish but a potent Prince over-threw the Gospell persecuted the Saints and burned many Shee raigned a short time lived ingloriously dyed in great discontent lost her Territories extreamly impoverished the Land so that her Successour found neither Armour Navie nor any defence for the Kingdome no not so much as any treasure to supply so many wants Her younger Sister succeding seemed to be left as a prey to any neighbour Prince who would first invade her But no sooner did shee which presently shee did set her selfe and imploy her Scepter to promote the Gospell and root out Poperie but all the blessings of a Nation were powred upon her and though shee were all alone without any Associats yet God made her a great helper to all her neighbours and terrour to her enemies insomuch that the most potent Monarch of Christendome was utterly foiled by her and brought into great streights and di●ficulties and so palbable even to the enemie was the blessing of God that the proud Spaniard could not refraine from upbraiding Christ that hee was turned Lutheran The same is Gods dealing in private with any house or person for God is alwayes the same And surely this is the promise of Christ who when he sent his Ministers to preach the Gospell commaunded them to impart peace to any Citie or house into which they entered and assures us that where they are rejected it shall be more tolerable for Sodome and Gomorra but the contrary shall follow on the contrary entertainment Luke 10. When the wayes of a man please the Lord hee will make all his enemies at peace with him But doth not
Christ a●firme that hee leaues not the worlds peace with the faithfull The Lord doth not there deny to giue peace but affirmes he giues it after another manner then the world Worldly men wish their friends prosperitie and perhaps would but cannot giue it and if they doe it lasteth a short time but Christ giues it effectually and keepes it to them This text much confirmes this point but yet further Doe we not see many true servants of God who tremble at his word liue not prosperously I answer No if we weigh well what is prosperitie and then compare their estate with it They liue in honour or riches it may well be so but honour and riches are no part of prosperiti● and but by accident no helps toward it For 1. They are vanitie and vexation of spirit how then can they bee any part of prosperitie 2 Riches and honours are often reserved to their owners for their evill No qnestion these things are to a man as a saile to a boat if the saile bee too great it sinkes the vessell but when it is fitted in a just quantitie then it causeth a swift and safe passage Thus wee often see when God giues a man riches honour c. in great quantitie but not grace and wisedome to manage this estate they are in continuall danger by every blast to sinke into some mischiefe Prosperitie therefore is such an estate when all things together worke for the best now this estate is promised by him that cannot lye to all them that loue him Rom. 8. 28. And obserue that God alway thus worketh Ioseph is sold into AEgypt and made a Bond-man but prospers in the house is put in prison but prospers there is brought out unto Pharaoh prospers with him is preferred to great dignitie prospers in that and becomes a meanes to saue much flesh Daniell is taken carried captiue and made a servant to an Idolatrous Prince prospers and findes favour with the chiefe Eunuch prospers with Nebuchadnezzar is accused and cast into the Denne of Lyons but prospers in all this for all these things tend to his advantage with God and men Yea so mightily doth God worke for them that even sinne also through his grace workes for their good Sinne workes godly sorrow godly sorrow care c. What thankfulnesse loue nay labour of loue and diligence to please did the sinne of Mary Magdalen and Paul worke in those Saints This then is a sure truth where the word is received with obedience prosperitie certainely followes it 2. Afflictions and troubles of the faithfull who heare and obey the word are if not parts yet meanes of their prosperitie this evidently followes from hence For if hee prosper in all things even afflictions shall tend to his good and worke for him that successe which his soule wishes for howsoever affliction as flowing from evill and ebbing againe into it of it selfe is evill yet as it is sanctified to those who loue God it cannot bee reckoned among evils but rather blessings Blessed is the man whom thou chastisest O Lord. Count it ex●eeding joy when you fall into divers tentations Wee glory intribulation Paul esteemes the fellowship of Christ his afflictions aboue all earthly things so that hee accounts of all other things as dung and losse in comparison sorting this fellowship with the knowledge of Christ and the vertue of his Resurrection For enlarging this point a little further let us consider 1. What successe or good it brings in to us 2. How being evill in it selfe it is turned to our good It is a meanes of good 1. by preventing evill 2. by working out for us things profitable It prevents destruction of body and soule Man is chastened with paine upon his bed and the multitude of his bones with strong paine so that his life abhorreth bread and his soule daintie meate Loe all these things worketh God with a man oftentimes that hee may bring backe his soule from the pit c. Thus God commaunds earthly Parents With-hold not correction from the childe if thou smite him with the rodde hee shall not dye Thou shalt smite him with the rodde and shalt deliver his soule from hell so also hee practiseth with his owne children And as it prevents destruction so also sinne the cause of it and keepes us from our owne wickednesse It workes many good and profitable things in us By afflictions wee are partakers of the holinesse of God and this bitter roote shootes forth the pleasant fruit of righteousnesse The sappe of a Crab-stocke of it selfe is sower and distastfull but when it is digested in a good sience it makes the fruit so much the more pleasant It breedes patience Rom. 5. 4. It purgeth from sinfull evill without and within Prov. 20. 30. and this knew that holy Patient Hee tryeth mee and I shall come forth like gold Looke as silver and golden vessels if they gather rust must be rubbed with something which is rough and harsh before they can be cleered so is it with these precious vessels It teacheth us the way of God and putteth us into it Psal. 119. 67. 71. and as it helpes us in all grace so it furthers us in glory see Mat. 5.11.12 2 Cor. 5. 17. But how comes it to be good unto us which is so evill in it selfe 1. By the over-ruling hand of God who brings light out of darkenesse good out of evill 2. By the correcting nature of grace which not onely tempers the evill and noysome qualitie of it but makes it medicinable and wholesome Hence where this grace doth not over-rule the cursed nature of affliction it brings forth murmuring as in the Israelits falling away more and more Esay 1. 5. and open blaspheming Revel 16. 9. So that as in many Antidots the hand of a cunning Apothecary tempering some poysons and correcting them with other ingredients makes a most wholesome receit so the hand of God seasoning afflictions with grace brings them to bee of great use and profit to every Christian. But beside all this good which it brings with it it selfe also as sanctified is an evident testimony of our adoption that we belong to the Lord who corrects not bastards nor suffers any child to be uncorrected In all which respects it may be justly accounted not onely a meanes to further and prosper us in our hopes but not the least part of our prosperitie 3. Prosperitie and successe comes not from any other cause but from God For howsoever it pleaseth the Lord to employ and use divers gifts in man as meanes for working successe as wisedome courage strength diligence yet it is he who first bestowes these gifts and then workes by them so that we could neither attaine these parts whereby we worke nor by them effect any thing without him It is nothing therefore in man neither in body or soule which can bring about his hopes and purposes but onely the Lord worketh
loues us out of his loue prepares us for grace and then giveth it when he hath fitted us for it and all this without promeriting nay any concurrance on our part that after he worketh in us and perfits what hee begins and crowns what he hath perfited and for our consolation that it is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that shewes mercie and not for our righteousnes but because he hath chosen us that his purpose according to election may stand not of workes but of him that calleth so is there great use of it in wicked persons for warning and caution Neither can I see how any desperate person can pervert this but in the like manner he may abuse any other doctrine to his destruction as the Papists this day abuse that point of justification by faith and not by workes and many other we must therefore not onely retaine this truth but apply it to that end for which it was given by God making our calling and election sure 3. So also the neglect and despising of that truth namely that the Lord doth loue and honour the persons and wayes of godly men is here reproved Hence might wicked men tremble to see how hatefull and abominable their wayes and persons are in his sight who can recompence and surely will reward them according to their workes And how justly might thousands of Christians tremble when they see their affections in this particular so contrary to Christ For they account basely of those whom God honours hate those whom God loues shew to them all contempt and malice in reviling slandering or any abuse that they can or dare offer What member of Christ art thou who despisest such as thy head hath crowned with his heavenly Kingdome How farre from a Christian who hast no loue to such whom Christ hath loved beyond his life So also by forgetting this lesson many depriue themselues of much comfort For how much joy might the weake Christian gather here if hee did continually remember He that hath given mee an heart to loue him he first loved me he hath set his heart upon me for good and therfore hath drawn me from my wicked vaine conversation to serue him and if he hath loved me when I was an enemie will he forsake me now he hath seasoned my heart with some measure of loue and desire of his service What a cordiall would this bee against all the revilings contempts and despitefull usage of the world we are therefore much to blame that we make no better use of a truth so full of profit and consolation Hence may the faithfull soule in any necessitie and upon all occasions draw endlesse comfort How did this hearten David in all persecution of Saul and slanders of his enemies Psal. 18. 10. c. Psal. 7. 3. c. yea indeed in all his trouble nay when he found his tongue unable in that dutie of thankfulnesse to poure out his heart 2 Sam. 7. 20● this yet offered him much consolation Thou Lord knowest thy servant The like see in Ieremie in much tentation and many grievances Ier. 12. 3. Especially remember Iob who when hee was assaulted on everie side without and within his friends accusing him of hypocrisie and fighting craftily against his faith the enemie bringing all the terrours of God in a full armie against him and making him possesse the iniquities of his youth yet could uphold his soule and keepe it from sinking in this storme with the remembrance of this truth and strongly applying it to his heart found powerfull consolation in this He knoweth my way and tryeth me That excellent Apostle persecuted by bloodie Infidels Iewes and Heathen slandered and wronged by false Brethren nay too little esteemed by his owne children in the Spirit accounted the off-scouring of all things could fully satisfie his owne soule and comfortably wait on God on this knowledge God was his witnesse 1 Thes. 2. 13. and could therefore ●light that censure of man 1 Cor. 3. 3. 5. Wee should therefore apply this for comfort when we are reviled as hypocrites by the world or inwardly accused by Satan that God sees and will judge when we are despised by men that God hath chosen us when we and our actions in Gods service are hated and abased that God hath loved and honoured both Labour for such wayes as are acceptable to God such as he hath chosen and commended such as he loues and honoureth For motiues oh remember thy heart is very deceitfull and will easily blind thee with counterfeit shewes and false hopes if thou lookest not very narrowly to it Learne therefore of this Saint to consider thy paths and with hast putting away delayes to turne thy feete into the wayes of God Say with thy selfe All the wayes of man are cleane in his owne eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits Every way of man is right in his owne eyes but the Lord pondereth the hearts Now what shall it profit mee if I as those vaunting Pharises justifie my selfe when the Lord knowes and condemnes me what good shall I reape from man that my actions are highly esteemed in the world when they are abomination to God Let mee never forget that there is a way seeming right unto man but the issues thereof are the wayes of death thinke with thy selfe what horrour will assaile and daunt thee in that day when having securely trusted in thine owne heart and wayes thine eyes are at length opened to see thine errour that thou and all thy workes are hated and detested by the Lord. Consider what infinite comfort and joy will spring in thy heart in all estates yea the most afflicted when thou canst say in truth that thou hast tryed and weighed thy pathes before they come to that great trya●l to bee pondered by the Lord and hast unfainedly taken up those wayes and walked in them uprightly with thy best endevour which God himselfe hath chosen and set for thee and will accept in his mercie Learne therefore to trust in the Lord with all thy heart and leane not to thine owne wisedome in all thy wayes acknowledge him and hee shall direct thy wayes Proposition 2. But the way of the ungodly shall perish In the former words the Prophet giues an infallible reason why the faithfull shall prosper in their wayes and bee blessed here also he useth a necessary argument why the ungodly cannot haue good successe nor ever attaine to happinesse Now how soever he leaues out the Antithesis or opposite axiom to the former God knowes not the way of ungodly men yet is it here without question to be understood I will therefore handle it fully and annexe the cause with the effect in this intire proposition God knowes not the way of the ungodly therefore they their wayes shall perish The words haue beene before sufficiently cleered as well who are the ungodly what also is ment by their wayes