Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n governor_n king_n supreme_a 2,563 5 8.6524 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A27356 City security stated in a sermon preached at St. Pauls August 11th, 1661 before the right Honourable the Lord Mayor / by William Bell ... Bell, William, 1626-1683. 1661 (1661) Wing B1809; ESTC R12348 22,139 32

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

City Security STATED IN A SERMON P●eached at St Pauls August 11th 1661. Before the Right Honourable THE LORD MAYOR By ●illia● Bell B. D. late Fellow of St John Baptists Colledg 〈◊〉 and now Chaplain to his Majesty in his Tower of LONDON LONDON Printed for John Baker at the Sign of the Peacock in St Pauls Church-yard 1661. City Security PSALM 127. the latter part of the first Verse Except the Lord keep the City the Watchman waketh but in vain THere is a naturall necessitous humility lodged in persons of mean and low spirits men of no parts or no knowledge of their parts or who have no just esteem of them And there is an artificiall flagitious humility when like the Hawk men stoop for a quarry 2 Sam. 15.5 6. Thus Absalom stole the hearts of his Fathers subjects out at their mouths by his treacherous kisses And there is a penall calamitous humility when God trips up the heels of insolent persons such was that of proud Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4.33 when devested of Empire and Reason Humiliatus erat quid humilis non erat humbled because not humble And there is a Celestiall gratious humility when men of eminent parts and place own God as the fountain of all they have and are that fills and feeds their Channells A royall virtue indeed when Kings acknowledge their Thrones to be set upon Gods foot stoole and though in all Causes and over all Persons as well Ecclesiasticall as Civill in their own Dominions Supream heads and Governours yet pay their ho … … nd fealty to the King of Kings in confessing they are all this under God and his Christ It is the method of proud men to compare themselves with their inferiours and as the Pharisee to cry out Lord what am I not like those that measure themselves by the declining Sun and so seem taller than they are But the humble person compares himself his power his wisdome his holinesse his honour with those of God and as the Publican cries out Lord what am I As those that measure themselves by the Sun at noon and their bedwarfd shadow and are more than they seem It is Moses his Title of Honour to be stiled Gods servant And Davids chief ambition to be a Nethenim in the house of God The threshold of whose Temple was a step above his Throne and he takes a degree to be a Porter at it Rev. 4.10 The Elders cast down their Crowns at the feet of God And as all subordinate Powers give in at the presence of the King as Stars return their light to the Sun at his arising so even Kings lower their Scepters when God exalts his since the best of them are but the off-sets thereof The most absolute Monarchs are thus far relative that they subsist by God there being no independency in reference to him There are no designes be the means or men that carry them on never so potent that come not to naught if blown upon by God Nor is any instrument so impotent that with God is not efficacious Phil. 4.13 This is the ground of St Pauls omnipotency I can do all things through Christ which strengthneth me Proud Babel that was raised in Rebellion against God was razed in confusion by him Zech. 4.6 7. But where not an Army nor strength but the Spirit of God builds there even the head stone is laid and the shouting is grace grace God blessed the Aegyptian Midwives Exod. 1.21 by his building them houses for their supporting the houses of the Israelites And he who blessed them for their work blessed them in it And as he suited the reward to the work so he suited the work to his own promise for he had pronounced that primitive blessing of Increase Gen. 1.28 and Multiply on that people and man cannot substract where God will multiply No nor yet multiply where he will substract He who keeps the key of David opens the barren Rev. 3.7 and shuts up the fruitfull Womb And as from one Vine one fertil Wife Psal 128.3 he can draw forth the blessing of Clusters of Children for him that feareth him Verse 1. 1 Kings 11.3 so from seven hundred Wives and three hundred Concubines the product to Solomon was but a single Rhehoboam so farre as Scripture undertakes the Genealogy but one Grape from so many Vines and that too but such an one as men gather of Thornes who like Ivy plucked down the house he pretended to support Both the fruit of the common Womb the earth is Gods for The earth is the Lords and the fullnesse thereof Psal 24.1 and that of every particular one too of every Mother as well as that generall one Psal 12● 3 for Children are the inheritance of the Lord and the fruit of the Womb is his reward So that there is neither fertility nor security plenty nor safety without God for except he build the house they labour in vain that build it Except he keep the City c. Which words are whether written by Solomon Scope of the Text. Eccl. 8.4 or by David for Solomon as is most probable the words of a King and there is power and truth in them as they are a proof of the necessary concurrence of divine providence to the undertakings of men And the procedure of the argument is a minore ad majus from the lesse to the greater that that providence is so particular as to extend to the Oeconomy of every private family except the Lord build c. that is Clarius Castalio in loc nisi augeat rem familiarem familiam unlesse he improve the estate and houshold haeredes liberos the heirs the children there can be no increase or improvement of either by any And yet that providence is withall so generall as to comprehend the polity of a whole City Except the Lord keep the City c. The name of a family shall rot unlesse God shall vouchsafe to preserve it by a numerous and perfume it by a gratious succession of generations And the City shall be buried in its own ruines for all its fortifications of dead earth its Walls and Towers and of living earth its Militia and Magistrates unlesse God shall supervise and blesse all Except the Lord keep c. Division The words are a mod●l Proposition The Proposition The Watchman waketh but in vain The modus or limitation Except the Lord keep the City I shall not mangle the words by any more minute division of them that I may not part God from the City the Watchman from God vigilance from the Watchman nor successe from his vigilance But I shall speak to it by way of Explication and Application 1. By way of Explication in unfolding these four particulars First What is intended by the word Watchman Secondly What is meant by the City Thirdly What is the purport of this phrase of Gods keeping the City Fourthly I shall insist on what