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A02846 The strong helper, offering to beare euery mans burthen. Or, A treatise, teaching in all troubles how to cast our burden vpon God but chiefly deliuering infallible grounds of comfort for quieting of troubled consciences. By Iohn Haivvard. Hayward, John, D.D. 1614 (1614) STC 12986; ESTC S103943 264,841 668

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Lord to tell him of his fault that if hee be curable he may amend And because thou knowest not but that it may please God to ease thy burden of domesticall troubles making them of short continuance by reforming the troubler it is a speciall point of casting this burden vpon God to pray for the amendment of thy neighbour and to put thy helping hand thereto by gentle and neighbourly admonitions But this liberty of telling thy neighbour his fault giues no allowance of rayling and reproaching and publique disgracing of men by casting their infirmities and faults in their teeth A christian man must abhorre all such bitter courses remembring what the Apostle Peter saith Loue couereth a multitude of sinnes That is a right charitable man though hee seeke to reforme his neighbour by telling him of his sinne yet he will not disgrace or shame his neighbor by publishing his sinne It may please God to ease thee of the burden of thy domesticall trouble by weakening the power and crossing the malice and abating the pride of thy troubler that either hee shall not dare or shall not be able to proceede any further in thy vexation as he daunted the Pride of Laban when he pursued Iacob for hee meant euill to Iacob but by the way God came to Laban the Arnmite●… a dreame by night and said vnto him take heede that thou speake not t●… Iacob aught saue good And by this threatning of the Lord Labans stomake was taken down as hee confessed to Iacob the next day saying I am able to doe you euill but the God of your Father spake vnto mee yester night saying Take heed that thou speake not to Iacob aught saue good And GOD crossed the fury and violence of Saul when hee thought to haue slaine Dauid Saul intended to s●…ite Dauid to the w●…ll with the speare but he turned asi●… out of Sauls presence and he ●…ote the speare against the wall but Dauid si●…d and escaped c. In this case it is not lawful fo●… thee to pray vnto God for the death the sickenesse the impouerishing or any way the hurt of thine enemy leaue him to the iudgement of God and pray vnto God to forgiue him his wicked malice Yet is it lawfull for thee to pray vnto God that hee will be pleased to confound the deuices and to crosse the attempts and to scatter the prepared power of thine aduersaries So we reade that Dauid in the time of Absoloms treason when he vnderstood that Ahitophel that great politician tooke part with him he feared his counsell and first prayed vnto God saying O Lord I pray thee turne the councell of Ahitophel into foolishnesse And afterward sent his wise and faithful friend Hushai the A●…chite to bee an opposite vnto Ahitophel by whose meanes indeede Ahitophels counsell was reiected to the danger of Absolom and safetie of Dauid and many like prayers wee haue in the Psalmes In one place Vp Lord let not man preuaile In another place Let not them that are mine enemie vniustly reioyc ouer mee neither let them winke with the e●…e that hate mee without a cause And in another place Let not the wicked haue his desire O Lord performe not his wicked thought lest they be prowd Thus wee see that the Saints haue made their prayer vnto God against the malice power and cunning of their aduersaries that God would be pleased to abate their pride to asswage their malice to confound their deuices and delude their cunning that they might not preuaile to doe the mischiefe that they intended And so far it is lawfull for thee to pray for their disappointing And because sometime the seruants of God haue made request vnto him against the persons of their enemies praying for their destruction as Eli●… did against the messengers of the King of Israel saying If that I be a man of God let fire come downe from heauen and deuoure thee and thy fifty As Dauid in diuers places of the psalmes let them bee confounded and put to shame that seeke after my soule let them be turned backe and brought to confusion that imagine mine hurt And in another place set thou the wicked ouer him and let the aduersarie stand at his right hand when he shal bee iudged let him be condemned and let h●… praier be turned into sinne As Peter t●…e Apostle praied against Simon Magus thy mony perish with thee that is both thou and thy mony perish And Paul the Apostle against Alexander the Copper-smith saying Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much euill the Lord reward him according to his workes Let none of vs thinke that for the procuring our ease and deliuerance from our neare troubles it is lawfull for vs to bend the force of our p●…aiers against the persons of our aduersaries and to desire their destruction or hurt For those whose examples are before remembred were the Prophets of God and Apostles of the Lord Iesus Christ who knew the reprobation of those against whom they praied and so rather pronounced the knowen iudgements of God then the priuate affections of their owne hearts and if they pronounced their owne affections they were affections conformed to the known iudgements of God not contending to guide moue Gods iudgements So doth S. Austin affirme of all such praiers saying those things which are spoken in the forme of wishing are things opened by a spirit of prophecying and when they say let that be done and let that be done it is no other then if they had said such and such a thing shall come vnto them No●… we haue no such knowledge of any mans reprobation he may prooue a sheep of Christ whom as yet by his fruits we find and therfore esteem a wolfe And we haue no such spirit of prophecy by which we can foretell what wrath from God shall fall vpon them And also our Sauiour hath giuen vnto vs this rule which we must follow Pray for them which hurt you and persecute you Therefore if God be pleased to ease vs of the burden of our troubles by weakning the power asswaging the pride and malice and by disappointing and scattering the purposes and counsel of out enemies we in seeking this grace at his hands may pray against their deuises but not a against their persons And therefore by this rule is no countenance giuen to the dire imprecations and bitter curses that many vncharitable men powre out against their troublers Perhaps it may please God to ease thee of this burden of domesticall troubles making them short either by remoouing thy troubler from thee or by remouing thee from thy troubler And this remoue all may be made either by death or by some other course And thereto some rules pertaine in the right obseruation whereof a wise man for his ease casteth his burden vpon God If the remoue be to be made by death this is a thing
from being lost in the first sence and meaning of that word And there is o●…e that will saue from destruction those that are ready to perish and thee among others that will deliuer from damnation those that are already iudged and thee as well as others and that wil pluck out of the iawes of death out of the snares of Satan and out from the gates of hell those that were ready to be swallowed vp and deuoured as a pray and thee assoone as others so to recouer thee from being lost in the sense and meaning of the word And this seeker is of that diligence wisdome that he cannot be disappointed of finding this sauiour is of that goodnes power that he will not and cannot be letted from sauing whom hee intendeth to deliuer of whom the Apostle to the Hebrewes saith He is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing hee euer liueth to make intercession for them And who is this diligent seeker that can and will so certainely finde who is this mightie Sauiour that can and will so certainely preserue it is the Lord Iesus Christ the sonne of God the sauiour of mankind of whom the Euangelist yea himselfe the Euangelist onely reporting his words saith The sonne of man is come to seeke and saue that which was lost So that if any man be gone astray if any man bee out of the knowledge and care of God his keeper Iesus came to seeke him And if any were worthy to perish and already by sentence giuen adiudged to perish such is the condition of all men Iesu●… is come to saue him And it is worthy obseruation that he saith The sonne of man came to seeke the sonne of man came to saue as making this seeking and sauing of them that were lost to be the onely end as indeed it was of his comming into the world For this cause was he conceiued by the Holy Ghost for this purpose was he borne of the Virgin Mary to this end and for the effecting of this saluation was the sonne of God made the sonne of man yea for this and for this onely did he fulfill all righteousnes and yeelded obedience euen to the death of the crosse that he might seeke and find them that were gone astray and that he might recouer and saue them that were lost so that hee that shall deny these things to be truely intended and fully performed by Iesus Christ doeth make idle and fruitlesse the incarnation and passion of our Lord Iesus Christ and denieth the vertue of the death and bloudsheding of the sonne of God Let our afflicted sinner consider these things and set his heart on worke to meditate vpon them and it will come to passe that whereas before the remembrance of his lost estate was cause of heauines vnto him the same very condition shall giue him comfort and hope and saue him as an argument to proue him to be one of those for whom Iesus Christ died to saue them For if it be true that the lord Iesus came to seeke and to saue them that were lost and be also true that ●…e is lost then it must also be true that Iesus Chist came to seeke to saue him The Lord Iesus said to the woman of C●…naan I am not sent but vnto the lost ●…eepe of the house of Israel Vnto those lost sheepe hee was sent and to none other So that if our afflicted sinner see himselfe to be a lost sheepe there is hope that the Lord Iesus was ●…ent for yea it is most sure that he was sent for him sent to seeke him sent to saue him whereas if he had a proud opinion of himselfe as had the Pharises that he were not as other men for so gloried hee saying O God thanke thee that I am not as other men or if he nourished a careles opinion of himselfe as doe the contemners of the world that he were in no danger for so doe they flatter themselues saving Wee are deliuered though we haue done all these abominations Then Iesus indeed should not profit him for hee came for none such He saith of himselfe I am not come to call the righteous but the sinners to repentance In this very name therefore that he is a lost sinner a sinner worthy to perish he may comfort himselfe in Iesus Christ and hope to be saued by him that came to seeke and saue that which was lost Let me in a few words briefely and plainely open to this sinner his estate what it is in himselfe and what it is in Iesus Christ that as in himselfe hee seeth cause of griefe and feare so in Iesus Christ he may see cause of hope and reioicing if hee looke into himselfe and consider what he is by birth what he is by kind and what he hath manifested and declared himselfe to bee by his life and conuersation surely hee is and shall find himselfe to be a lost creature and a child of wrath for he shall find nothing in himselfe but sinne deseruing eternall dest●…uction he shall find that hee was conceiued in sinne that he was borne in iniquitie and that he liued in sinne not onely in the daies of his first ignorance whi●…e sinne reigned without resistance in his mortall body but also in the daies of knowledge sinne yet remaining and misleading him into many errors and it ●… thus not onely in him but euen in all ●…en and among all others euen in the elect of God in Gods owne peculiar people euen they at home and in themselues are lost creatures dead in sinnes and by sinnes deseruing eternall death The Angell appearing to Ioseph said vnto him of the child conceiued in the wombe of the Virgin Mary Shee shall ●…ing forth a sonne and thou shalt call his ●…me Iesus for he shall saue his people from their sinnes Those whom his father gaue vnto him therefore called his people them he saueth he saueth them from their sinnes By which speech it is plainly intimated that euen they considered in themselues are lost by their sins And so is our afflicted sinner considered in himselfe with respect to his kind to his birth and to his life hee is lost hee is a child of perdition and therein hee hath cause to be humbled and to feare the iustice of God But let not the sinner gaze so long vpon this his naturall estate that his dazled eies should after be vnable to look any higher such a view of this our naturall condition as may serue to beate downe the pride of flesh and bloud and to bring vs vnto true humilitie and to the deniall of our selues before God is sufficient Let him therefore after consider him selfe in another and view his conditiō estate in Iesus Christ by vertue of his holy calling of his second birth namely his regeneration and hee shall find himselfe another man He shall find that God hath
Chapter we shall finde it to be not any particular transgression of any or of all the precepts of the law but a wil-full opposition of our heart against as I may call it the body of religion first rightly vnderstoode and certainely knowne to be the true religion of God and vpon no other cause but out of meere enuie The Pharises heard the doctrine of our Lord Iesus Christ and saw his miracles and knew him to bee that sonne of Dauid that Messias that was promised they knew his doctrine to be holy and heauenly and his workes to bee wrought by the finger of God Yet because the people honoured him and vpon the sight of his miracle when hee healed the man that was possessed of a diuell and was both blind and dumbe because they then cryed out saying Is not this that sonne of Dauid They therefore out of enuy and mallice without any other cause gaue it out concerning him saying He casteth out Diuels no otherwise but by Belzebub the prince of Diuels Indeuoring by these wordes to perswade the people that he was a wicked man risen vp out of Hell set vp by the Prince of diuels and assisted with his power to publish the doctrine of diuels and to vphold his kingdome so slaundering the person of Christ the workes of Christ and the doctrine of Christ all which many of them knew to be heauenly and of God If they had not knowne him to bee thee sonne of God they had not beene guilty of that great sinne As the Lord said vnto them If ye were blind ye should not haue sinne your ignorance would haue cleered you from this wi●…full mallice But they knew his person to be sent of God his workes to be done by the finger of God and in his doctrine that he taught truely the will of God The Lord himselfe said vnto them Yee both know me and know whence I am Yet did they out of enuy detract from the glory of his workes that they might by that meanes bring both his person and heauenly doctrine into contempt And they ceased not this course of slandering his person of disgracing his workes and obscuring the truth of his doctrine laying wait also for his life for God giueth not repentance for this sinne till they had bought him with money of the traytor iudged him to be worthy of death vpon the knowne false testimonie of suborned witnesses extorted with their clamours his condemnation from an vnwilling Iudge pronouncing him iust whom he condemned for their pleasure added vnto his vniust death what reproch they could and after his resurrection corrupted the souldiers with money so causing it to be by them divulged that his disciples stole away his body out of the graue and that he did not rise againe from the dead by that course labouring out of enuy to suppresse the Gospell and doctrine of Iesus Christ which yet they knew by the illumination of the holy Ghost to be the very truth of God This malitious opposition of theirs against religion knowne to be the religion of God was their vnpardonable sinne It was not their vncharitabe proceeding against an innocent man their hiering of a seruant to betray his master their suborning of false witnesses against a iust person their corrupting of a Iudge to giue sentence to their liking though vniust nor the hy●…ing of bold men to spred a lie among the credulious multitude nor yet the cruell and vniust murdering of the Lord of life Though all these were grieuous sinnes for many were pardoned both of the people and of their gouerners that had their handes in all this iniustice though they had not so deepe a rea●… so enuious a purpose of ouerthrowing by his ouerthrow the religion which they knew to be of God as most of the Priestes and Pharises had many I say were pardoned that had their handes in the iniustice done to our sauiour for he praied for them saying Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe and that praier of his could not be in vaine But in the cunning fellowes both among the people and their goueruors that knew him and whence he was and how he wrought and what he taught and that all was of God this was their vupardonable sin that they vsed al that falshood corruption and cruelty both during his life and in his death only to this end to hinder the course of his doctrine as they say plainely in their councell If we let him thus alone all men will beleeue in him When they knew that doctrine taught by him wherein they would not haue the people to beleeue to be the very truth of God This is the vnpardonable sinne called blasphemie against the Holy Gost because it flaundereth and disgraceth the truth of God which was made knowen vnto them so made to shine in their hearts by the Holy Ghost called the spirit of truth because it leadeth into all truth This sinne is a common sinne of diuels that know God and maliciously seeke his dishonor that know the groundes of true and holy religion and enuiously seeke to depra●…e them to corrupt them and if they could to abolish them out of the world desiring nothing more then to disgrace the truth of God among men This sin is sometime but rarely found amongst men and in examination thy sinne will bee found not to be this sinne and therefore not to be vnpardonable which is a great ground of hope to build vpon First the sinne of him that is pressed with the generall and confused accusation of an euill and hypocriticall heart cannot be this sinne that being naturally the estate of all men that come into the world they are borne with a heart deceitfull and wicked aboue all things But no man can be borne guilty of blasphemy against the holy-ghost because no man is in his birth enlightned with the knowledge of true religion which knowledge must necessarily goe before this fearefull opposition Neither can this sinne bee found in them that are distinctly charged with a particular sinne or sins that were committed in the days of ignorance it cannot be those sinnes For he that may fall into this vnpardonable sinne must first haue a full cleere knowledge of true religion with perswasion that it is the trueth But the ignorant man wanteth that cleere knowledge And hee is far enough from this sinne Neither can it be found in them that sinne against knowledge but out of weakenesse either surprised with a sudden temptation or led captiue with a strong and violent temptation for when these men are at libertie to consider what they haue done they haue no pleasure in it But that vnpardonable sinne is a voluntary wilfull and malicious opposition against the knowne truth out of their enuy not induring the glory of Christ in his Gospel Neither can any particular breach of any one Commandement nor all the breaches of all the
true and God often lets his wrath fall heauily vpon his elect for their sinnes To that end heare the words of Gods Church speaking to the malignant company of her enemies that reioice at her trouble I will look vnto the Lord I will wait for God my Sauiour my God will heare me Reioice not against me O mine enemie though I fall I shall arise when I shall sit in darknes the Lord shall be alight vnto me I will beare the wrath of the Lord because I haue sinned against him vntill he plead my cause and execute iudgment for mee then will hee bring mee forth vnto the light I shall see his righteousnes The Church confesseth that she bare the wrath of God shee confesseth that that wrath fell vpon her for her sinnes and therefore promiseth to beare it patiently because she bare it iustly and she takes not that wrath of God for any euidence of reprobation neither ceaseth to esteeme her selfe the chosen of the Lord that shall inherit his fauour And therefore she exerciseth her faith in looking vp vnto the Lord and out of faith promiseth her selfe all gratious respect with God in her praiers shewes her selfe rich in hope that God himselfe will in due time plead her cause and bring her out of the darknes of her trouble into the light of ioy and so magnifie his loue and fauour to her that her aduersarie the malignant congregation shal be ashamed Therefore certainly God doeth often let his wrath fall vpon the elect for their sinnes and the manifest strokes of Gods wrath cannot bee said to be infallible euidences and signes of reprobation as our afflicted sinner affirmeth to his owne great hurt And if hapily vpon hearing of these things thus spoken his diseased mind should begin to cauill and to say that if other iudgements and strokes of Gods wrath be not euidences of reprobation yet that iudgement and stroke of wrath that is fallen vpon him is a plaine euidence of reprobation his iudgement being accusing thoughts a wounded conseience the most heauie of all Gods iudgements whereof Salomon saith A wounded spirit who can beare it For that stroke is the beginning of intolerable punishment it is the very gate of h●…ll i●… is that worme that shall liue euer in the bosome of the damned it is euen no other then hell vpon earth And why shold God set a mans sinnes against him in so terrible a manner as hee doeth in this temptation but because his meaning is to condemne vs for our sinnes aforehand to let vs see that hee shall doe it most iustly our sinnes being so many and solothsome against this cauill and for the remouing of this offence from his heart I will adde this vnto that that hath been already spoken that God doeth lay euen this particular stroke of his wrath namely a wounded conscience in the sight of sinnes vpon his elect and therefore that wrath is no euidence of reprobation The prophet Dauid bore this stroke of Gods wrath whereof he speaketh thus Thine arrowes haue light vpon 〈◊〉 and thine handlyeth vpon me there is nothing sound in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there rest in my bones by reason of my sinnes for mine iniquities are gone ouer my head and as a weighty burden they are too heauie for me Here was a stroke of the wrath of God fot he complaineth that Gods hand was heauie vpon him and that Gods arrowes had pierced him and it was not a weake stroke or slight touch but forcible and fearefull so that it made the whole man languish and for the anguish of his soule his body also was consumed and oppressed with paine and feeblenes so that neither in his flesh nor in his bones remained any soundnes And what stroke of Gods wrath was it but euen this particular stroke of accusing thoughts and of a wounded conscience by reason of sinnes that were so heauie a burdthen that the vexation of them was his consumption and was Dauid vpon whom this stroke of wrath fell was hee a reprobate if he were he was such a reprobate as the Lord Iesus Christ was and no other nor otherwise whom the builders refused cast aside as vnfit for the building but God made him the cheefe corner stone as Peter saith This is the stone cast aside of you builders which is become the head of the corner So in the kingdome of Israel Saul Doeg and other busie doers despised and cast aside the sonne os Ishai but God did chuse him to build the kingdome of Israel This therefore is most certaine that euen this stroke of Gods wrath when hee setteth our sinnes in order against vs is no more a signe of reprobation then any other stroke of Gods wrath whatsoeuer This part therefore of his obiection when he calleth himselfe a reprobate is a bold and desperate speech wherein he shews himselfe presumptuous against GOD and vncharitable against himselfe and whether he be a reprobate or not hee ought not to pronounce himselfe to be one the name of reprobation hauing reference vnto the vnknowne and secret counsell of God not vnto the knowne and manifest sinne of man And though our sinnes deserue reprobation Gods wrath falleth vpon them that are reprobate yet neither the sinne that wee are guiltie of nor the wrath that is fallen vpon vs for that sinne though it be this particular stroke of a wounded conscience can be said to be arguments of reprobation And whereas he saith that we deuise answers to his obiections that cary shew of strength among men but those his obictions are vnanswerable before God and our deuised answers before him will be of no vertue Let him know that the answers which wee haue made to his obiections are all grounded vpon the word of God by which word hee shall iudge all men and all the causes of all men As the Lord Iesus saith The word that I haue spoken it shall iudge in the last day And therefore our answers being grounded vpon that word shall stand as rules of trueth before the iudgement seat of God when all the obiections that he hath made growing onely from feare and from a weake heart distempered with a temptation of vnbeleefe shal be found to bee of no force And with this assurance of the sufficiencie of our answers wee waite to heare what he can further obiect why he may not hope for the forgiuenes of pardonable sins seeing Iesus Christ by his commandement hath giuen him leaue to aske forgiuenes of sinnes and God the father of our Lord Iesus hath promised to grant forgiuenes of sinnes as hath before out of the word of God beene truely declared CHAP. XXVII A Fresh assault this afflicted sinner maketh vpon vs and against himselfe for this fierie dart is not easily quenched And againe he obiecteth most vnkindly saying My sinne deserueth death and I must die I haue wronged the Lord of life
but thou hast beene able in body to stand vnder thy burden and to performe many good seruices in thy calling and he hath not smitten thee in thy children friends and goods with the rod of patient Iob but thy estate remaineth safe thy friends are cheerefull about thee such mercies of God haue accompained thy affliction and ministred comfort vnto thee in the time of it And in these things one part of that promise deliuered in Gods name by the Apostle hath beene performed vnto thee God will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that you be able He himselfe that sent the temptation gaue thee strength to beare the temptation and vnto this day thou bearest it though not without griefe yet not without hope Why then shouldest not thou withall cheerefulnes hope and pray that God would performe vnto thee graciously the other part of that promise but will giue the issue with the temptation c Doth not the Apostle when he giues vs that promise in Gods name vse a preface to perswade our hearts to hope for it and pray for it commending God in whose name hee giues it by the title of faithfull saying God is faithfull that will not suffer you to be tempted aboue that yee be able Hope then in that faithfull God pray vnto that faithful God who hath already approued his faithfulnesse in performing vnto thee theone part of his promise and as he is true and faithful he will hauing freely bound himselfe performe his whole promise and giue an issue of thy temptation and thou shalt liue to ouercome it And heere I will acquaint thee with an holy rule which God obserueth in the temptations of his seruants which rule offereth hope of deliuerance from thy greeuous temptation before death The rule is found in Deuteronomie where Moses speaking to the people of Israel and remembring their wearie wandring through a roaring and terrible wildernesse and the many heauie accidents that in that wildernesse came vnto them saith that God led them that way to humble them and to prooue them that he might doe them good in the latter end Gods meaning was after a hard beginning to bring them to a comfortable end when they were first humbled and prooued And very meete it is that Gods seruants should bee humbled and it is right in God to prooue his servants whether they loue the Lord with all their heart and will indure with patience his good pleasure and whether they will cleaue vnto him in danger and put their trust in his mercies and this proofe is best made by crosses and troubles for this cause doth God send troubles to his seruāts whom he loueth but alwayes with a reseruation in his good purpose to do them good in the latter end Apply this vnto thy selfe It was fit that thou shouldest be humbled to acknowledge thy selfe before God to be dust and ashes and laden with iniquitie to humble thee in this sort God hath sent this crosse doe thou therefore humble thy selfe vnder the mightie hand of God that hee may exalt thee in due time It was fit that thou shouldest be prooued that thou mightest see thine owne strength to bee but rotten●…es and dust and that thou mightest shew thy loue thy patience thy faith in God that it might appeare whether God or thine owne case were dearer vnto thee and whether thou wilt glorifie him in aduersitie as thou ma●… kest shew to doe in dayes of peace and prosperitie and thus to prooue thee he hath sent this temptation therefore now shew thy selfe a man shew thy selfe a Christian shrinke not from God murmure not at his visitation suffer with patience and pray in faith and be constant vnto the end And hee that hath brought thee into this temptation as it were into a roaring wildernesse to humble thee and to prooue thee will surely doe thee good in the latter end Surely this rule offereth vnto thee comfortable assurance that before the end of thy dayes thou shalt see an end of thy temptation and such an end as shall bring thee more ioy then thy affliction doth now breed thee griefe But say that death do take thee away before thou hast ouercome this temptation and thou fearest it may doe so grounding thy feare vpon two reasons one is the possibilitie of it thou maiest die presently the other is the danger of it thou thinkest that then thou shalt die in infidelitie and without faith if this danger were not the possibilitie of dying and death it selfe whensoeuer comming could bee no iust ground of thy feare for the Patriarks and Prophets yea Christ himselfe the Sonne of God and his holy Apostles died and all the Saints of God die And it can not bee hurtfull to any that is so common to all except there be some speciall danger annexed to it that makes it hurtfull to one that is not hurtfull to an other This danger thou saiest is thine infidelitie And thine infidelitie and want of faith thou proouest by the qualitie of thy temptation which thou takest to be directly opposite to faith and the banisher of all faith If therefore it shall appeare that though thou die before thou hast ouercome this temptation to thy liking yet thou wātest not faith in Christ euen faith vnto saluation then there is no cause of feare Indeede this temptation argueth a roote of infidelity to remaine in thee for seeing the Lord Iesus hath borne our sinnes in his body vpon the tree and in bearing them hath taken them away and hath washed and cleansed vs in his bloud and seeing God the father of our lord Iesus Christ receiuing satisfaction in the sacrifice of his Sonne hath by an irreuocable word promised to forgiue our sinnes and to remember our iniquities no more and these things both concerning the meritorious sacrifice of Christ and concerning the faithful promise of God are knowne and haue been made knowne vnto thee Surely this temptation of accusing thoughts would long since haue receiued an answere if there had not beene some roote of infidelitie remaining in thee to giue continuall nourishment vnto it But because there is some infidelitie in thee doth it therefore follow that there is no faith That is not so there may be both together either in his measure and degree Doth not Saint Paul tell vs that in himselfe at the same time there was one power which he calleth the Lawe of his minde leading him to God and to the loue of his lawe and an other power which hee calleth the lawe of his members leading him from God and leading him to sinne his words are I delight in the law of God concerning the innerman but I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind and leading mee captiue vnto the lawe of sinne which is in my members Can anie things bee more opposite one to an other then these two lawes of the mind and of the members either striuing to draw
precept of our Prophet and adding a reason in his words and these are his words Cast all your care on him that is on God for he careth for you that is when afflictions lie heauy vpon you and carefull thoughts how to bee freed from those afflictions troble your harts quiet those thoughts in your selues because your wisedome is defectiue and your power is weake and you are vnable to bring enterprises to passe and doing that which in such case God commandeth and alloweth to bee done commend your businesse and the successe of it to God by faithfull prayer his wisedome is infinite his power is omnipotent and by him enterprises are brought to passe This is Peters aduice vsing our Prophets words and only changing the name of burden into the name of care because our burdens doe breed our care and this reason hee addeth in his owne words for hee careth for you that is he taketh vpon him and will dispose and effect all things for your ●…ase and safetie This exposition of casting our burden vpon the Lord is further warranted by the councell of Saint Paul saying thus Be nothing carefull but in all things let your requests be shewed to God in prayer and supplication with giuing of thankes that is whereas others wrestling with the burden of their businesse take much care how to accomplish what they desire and gaze vpon their strength their wealth their wit and friends to see what helpe these can affoord doe not you in such sort trouble and turmoile your selues but modestly considering and vsing such meanes as you haue a●…d giuing thankes vnto God whether your meanes bee great or small intreat him in your faithfull prayer to prosecute the businesse for your not betraying your owne businesse by sloth and negligence yet trusting only to God and depending only vpon his blessing for successe faile not continually to sollicite him with your prayers Dauid that is the speaker here doth in another place by another speech of his excellently interpret this saying Trust thou in the Lord and doe good dwell in the Land and thou shalt bee fed assuredly delight thy selfe in the Lord and he will giue thee thy hearts desire commit thy way vnto the Lord and trust in him and he shall bring it to passe and he shall bring forth thy righteousnesse as the light and thy iudgement as the noone day wait patiently on the Lord hope in him Here hee giueth many precepts and euery precept hath his annexed promise The precepts do follow one another in a most kindly order and together doe teach vs what is to cast our burden vpon the Lord. First he commandeth vs to trust in the Lord that is to cal to remembrance the couenant that God made with vs and the many promises that hee hath giuen vs and seeing hee is faithfull and true in all his promises to trust to that couenant and to ground our faith vpon those promises Secondly hee commandeth vs to delight our selues in the Lord that is to cheere vp our hearts in God and to reioice in him seeing wee haue a God both wise mighty mercisull and saithfull tied vnto vs by so large promises more worth then all friends fauourers and helpers in the world And this reioicing kindely followeth trust in God Thirdly he commandeth vs to commit our waies to the Lord that is after our trust is setled in the couenant and promises and our ioy conceiued in hauing God so tied vnto vs then to fall to prayer and to intreate God that he will take our cause into his hands that he will bee pleased to prosecute the businesse for vs and seeing hee is the gouerner and disposer of all the world and of all causes in the world that hee will vouchsafe among all other causes to haue care of ours Lastly he commandeth vs to wait patiently vpon God and hope in him that is when trust hath begotten reioycing and trust and reioycing haue together shewed our desires vnto God in prayer then to expect in quietnes of our minde such issue as he shall be pleased to giue not failing to hope for all goodnesse at his hands Among which degrees of our demenour to God-ward for the referring of our cause●… to him hee forgetteth not to insert this aduise that wee doe good and dwell in the land that is that continuing in our place and standing we take no in direct courses that may offend God and pull a curse vpon vs in stead of a blessing but that wee doe the offices of our callings behauing our selues in all things as becommeth wise and honest men as in the sight of God that we may in all good conscience expect his blessing Thus doth he teach vs to cast our burdens vpon God These rules being obserued then he promiseth in all things ease of our burdens First he promiseth sufficient maintenance saying Thou shalt be fed assuredly Secondly hee promiseth content of heart saying He will giue thee thy hearts desire Thirdly he promiseth cōuenient dispatch of all thy businesse saying And hee shall bring it to passe Fourthly he promiseth iustification of all thy well doings against mis-construction and slander saying Hee shall bring forth thy righteousnesse as the light and thy iudgement as the noone day which all men cleerly discerne These promises pertaine to the second part of my text and they greatly commend the soundnesse of those rules of aduice whereto they are annexed And the rules of aduice doe interpret the casting of our burden vpon God That my text speaketh of and they shew vs that this is truely to cast our burden vpon God namely in our trouble to remember the couenant of God and the promises of help which as he gaue in mercy so hee will fulfill in truth and to trust vnto that couenant and vnto those promises that is vnto that God that made that couenant and gaue those promises and thereupon to take heart vnto vs and to cheere our selues in God which hee calleth delighting in God reioyeing that we haue so wise so mighty so mercifull and so faithfull a God so strongly tied vnto vs by so faithfull promises and then in this gladnesse of our hearts to commend our businesse vnto God by praier and to make him our aduocate our Atturny our solliciter our factor our agent putting ouer our cause wholy to him reseruing nothing to ourselues but to put him in remembrance from time to time by our praier and carefully shunning all vnlawfull shifts that flesh and bloud may perswade vnto doing that onely that hee by his word doth command vs. And hauing thus left the cause in the hands of God to wait patiently and quietly for such successe as God shall be pleased to giue thinking that alwaies best which hee shall bee pleased to doe This by Dauids owne interpretation is that casting of our burden vpon the Lord which in the words of our text hee aduiseth vnto For
cause vnquietnes Parents must be honoured and Children must be cared for though in some things they grieue vs and God may amend them at the last if wee in the meane while bearing patiently their infirmities continue our duety to them and our prayers for them If it be Masters or Seruants that cause vnquietnesse the Seruants in patience must bee subiect to their Maisters with all feare not only to the good and curteous but also to the froward they can not shake off their Maisters while the dayes of their seruitude continue and the maisters in patience must do vnto their seruants that which is iust not omitting any meanes whereby they may reforme them and in the end the master hath power to ease himselfe of an incurable euill seruāt by dismissing him If it be neighbour against neighbor that causeth vnquietnesse this rule teacheth not to render euill for euill nor rebuke for rebuke but contra●…iwise in patience to blesse and to doe all good offices in neede whereby thou shalt haue peace in thy heart howsoeuer thy neighbour bee disposed to contention And if thy home-trouble be painefull sickenesse either vpon thy selfe or vpon some of thy houshold or some other neare and deare vnto thee this rule teacheth thee whatsoeuer other meanes for recouerie of health be vsed to beare thy visitation meekely humbling thy selfe vnder the mighty hand of God in euery thing If thy trouble bee the death of any whose life thou didst desire this rule will teach thee knowing the death of the righteous to bee vnto them the beginning of true life to giue glorie to God with a quiet mind This patience in all things will giue thee ease of thy burden according to the saying of our Sauiour Take my yoake on you and learne of me that I am meeke and lowly in heart and ye shall finde rest vnto your soules This is one common rule A second common rule in all these troubles pertaining to the right casting of them vpon God is that we pray vnto God crauing his helpe who for ought wee know hath therefore layed these troubles vpon vs because we haue been negligent in prayer that now feeling sensibly in our sorrow our neede of his helpe wee might amend our old negligence and fall to praier And surely whether God did send our troubles for that cause or no yet this is most sure that prayer is a most profitable course for the easing of our trouble which God commandeth with promise of ease saying by the Prophet Call vpon me in the day of trouble so will I deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie mee And the Saints haue alwayes vsed it with happy successe of ease As the Prophet testifieth saying These called vppon the Lord and hee heard them So did Iacob when returning from his vnckles hee heard that Esau was comming forth against him with foure hundred men hee said thus vnto God I pray thee deliuer me from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau for I feare him lest hee will come and smite mee and the mother vppon the children And according to his desire God deliuered him from his feare for his brother and hee met in peace and departed one from another in peace so did Moses when the Aegiptians pursued the Israelites and the Israelites feared the Aegiptians before the red Sea The Lord fayd vnto Moses Wherefore criest thou vnto mee for Moses in his heart prayed earnestly vnto God and God did deliuer him from his feare opening a passage for the Israelites thorow the waters of the red Sea and drowning in the floud the Aegiptians that presumed to follow so that Israel sawe the Aegiptians dead vpon the Sea banke Wee neede not stand vpon particular examples hauing a generall rule that neuer fayleth the Prophet saying The Lord is neare vnto all that call vpon him yea to all that call vpon him in trueth hee will fulfill the esire of them that feare him he also will beare their crie and will helpe them Now seeing the saints doe thus in their troubles pray vnto God for ease and do thus at the hands of God obtaine ease when they pray in their troubles it is euident that to pray vnto God in our trouble is a worthy rule of casting our burden vpon God in all domesticall yea in al whatsoeuer troubles And let no man say there is no need in these troubles to trouble God with our praiers because he knoweth both what we suffer and what himselfe hath determined to do for these reasons thou oughtest the more gladly to pray because God doth vnderstand thy want before thou complaine and is determined to succour before thou intreate him thy labour with such a God cannot be in vaine And this know thou hast great imploiment for thy praiers in these and such like troubles First thou hast neede to offer vp praiers vnto God for thy selfe that he will giue thee patience and wisedome to demeane thy selfe aright vnder these troubls that thou maiest neither be a murmurer against God grudging at those troubles nor increase thy troubles by dealing indiscreetly and frowardly with them that are the causers and occasion of thy troubles nor maiest erre and be wanting in vsing good remedies to heale and reforme them that are the causers of thy troubles And if thy domesticall trouble be sicknesse in thine owne body how necessary it is to pray vnto God to giue thee patience to send thee health to forgiue thy sins and to prepare thee for death when Iames the Apostle exhorteth to reioice for temptations and to continue in patience till patience haue her perfect worke because these things require an extraordinary wisedome he further aduiseth vs to pray vnto God for that wisedome saying If any of ●…ou lack wisedome let him aske of God who giueth vnto all men liberally Giuing to vnderstand by that aduise how necessary it is in the time of trouble to vse pra●…er for thy selfe that thou maiest demeane thy selfe patiently and wisely to glorifie God in thy trouble to profit by the same trouble and not to increase the same but safely to grow out of it and to recouer peace and health Secondly thou hast need to offer vp praiers vnto God for them by whose meanes thou art troubled or for whose sake thou art grieued Sometime thou art vnkindly vsed either by thy husband or wife either by thy parents or children or such as haue stept into the roome of parents and children and haue those names by law giuen them not by nature due vnto them or else by thy master or seruant or by some friend or neighbour For these thou hast great cause to pray vnto God that he will giue them better minds and let them see their fault with mislike of it and see what becommeth them to doe and giue them a heart to doe it If they continue in their frowardnesse shall they not continue to be troublers vnto
continue in health and that they may continue to deale iustly honestly and dutifully This triple imploiment for thy praier thou hast i●… the time of thy domesticall trouble for thy selfe that art troubled or grieued for them by whose meanes thou art troubled or for whose sake thou art grieued and for the rest This is the second common rule of casting thy burdon vpon God in domesticall troubles namely that thou fall to praier according to the saying of S. Iames is any among you afflicted let him pray Now let vs see what other rules as more particular are to be added to patience and praier CHAP. IX THese domestical troubles being of diuers sorts let vs first distinguish them into two rankes because it is either sicknesse death or some calamity that is happend to thy selfe or to some other neighbour 〈◊〉 ●…d kinsman or of thy family for which thou art out of thy loue and compassion to others and out of sence of thine owne euill greeued Or else it is some wrong offered vnto thee by others in their vnthankfulnesse disobedience vniustice or forwardnesse out of which springeth ●…vnquietnesse and vexation to thee with this latter member of wrongs let vs first begin and see what it is to cast this burden vpon God First here let the wronged person that beareth the burden consider whether the occasion of these burdens grew of himselfe or no. For so it oftentimes commeth to passe that the vnkindnesse of t●…e husband prouoketh the wife to some such course as turneth after to the husbands trouble And likewise the disobedience of the wife may driue the husband vnto that course that after becommeth her heauy burden Can the party that first did wrong without prouocation be offended with the party that in the second place did amisse being prouoked somtimes the fondnesse and negligence of parents that wil not instruct nor when needess correct their children nor in any thing restraine them of their owne will or else the euill example of the parents makes them become wanton disordered and euill conditioned as it fell out in Hell his children and in the end the parents see and heare things of their children that grieue their hearts and out of their disobedience and insolency they are wronged and it cannot be otherwise folly cleaning to the soule of the childe but that when the soule is not husbandly tilled by the discipline of the parents it must bring forth weedes of euill behauiour sometime the child that complaineth of the vnkindnesse of parents hath by his owne folly by his disobedience and riotous courses giuen vnto his parents of themselues tender and louing inough cause to be vnkind to change their countenance to shorten their allowance yea to shut the dore against him and to settle his inheritance vpon some other So likewise the m●…ster sometimes hath no care at home to teach his seruants to know and feare God and if he goe to the house of God himselfe he careth not to bring his seruants with him or if he bring them with him hee looketh not whether they stay there or no or if they stay whether they marke and learne any thing or no these are not the studies of his heart He suffereth them also to exceede decorum and comelinesse of seruants in their apparel and to be abroad at vnseasonable times with other yong persons and what youth and liberty wanting an ouerseer will doe wise men know also by his owne euill example of riot and vnthristinesse hee becomes vnto his seruants a plaine corrupter they thinking themselues out of danger of reproofe while they tread in the steppes of their masters and gouernours or else an euill master dealeth vniustly and vnkindly with a faithfull seruant and being so brought vp and so prouoked no maruell if at length they breed their Masters trouble Sometime the seruant being both well taught and well intreated and hauing no iust exception against the gouernment and vsage of his Master out of the lewdnesse of his owne euill heart or harkening to the counsell of ill company becommeth disobedient and vnfaithfull and prouoketh his master to take strait courses with him Sometime also an vndiscreet man dwelling by a neighbour of peaceable disposition presumeth vpon his neighbours softnesse and offereth him wrong in such manner as ouercommeth patience and makes the quiet man to stir againe and then hath he trouble in his habitation and feeles himselfe compassed with troubles more then he looked for in all these and like cases the grieued man is the occasion of his owne burden in these domesticall troubles When he findeth this then to cast his burden vpon the Lord for his case is to reforme the errours of his owne misgo uernment and to looke better to the waies of his family and to reforme the errours of his owne life that hee giue better light vnto his owne houshold and draw them backe to goodnesse by his example whom hee had corrupted before and to giue satisfaction to his neighbour whom hee had wronged and to abstaine from after-wronging of him Thus stopping the fountaine of cause giuen by himselfe the streame of offence takē by others wil soone drie vp the common rules of patience and harty praier to God withal not neglected If thy vnkindnesse to thy wise and thy bad husbandry made hir vnquiet vse her more kindly and proue a better husband and she shall be quiet So let the wife by more dutifull and modest behauiour recouer hir husbands loue If neglect of discipline with too much remisnesse in gouerning children and seruants and thine owne euill example among them were cause of their disorder vse thy fatherly and masterly authority better and giue a better example and thou shalt haue them in better obedience The child also and seruant becomming more obedient and more faithfull shall soone recouer the loue and fauour of their Parents and Masters And if thy neighbour were prouoked to vex thee because thou hadst first iniuriously vexed him make thy peace with him for the first wrong and abstain from offering a second and hee will liue in peace with thee Surely if the occasion of a mans domesticall trouble grew from himselfe this is to cast his burden vpon God for his owne ease in the feare of God to remooue the occasion to reforme the disorder in himselfe to giue satisfaction to seeke reconciliation and to hold a better course afterward and to doe this in patience ioyning withall praier vnto God that he wil giue both to himselfe and to them that were his troublers wisdome and grace that hee may no more giue and they may no more take any such offence But if a mans domesticall troubles grow not from himselfe giuing the occasion but onely from their owne euill heart that troubled him so that he can say as Samuel did Whom haue I done wrong to Or whom haue I hurt And as Dauid said O Lord my God if I haue done this thing if
or wealths to stand a blanke a cypher ●… blot and an impediment either in common wealth or Church and to be an offence in the eye both of God all good men and to seeke to get his liuing by honest labour in some other calling that he hath bene better fitted for as Zacharie reporteth the words of some idle Prophets in their repentance as namely That he should no more weare a rough garment that is the robe of the Prophets profession that he was vnfit for and he should say I am no Prophet I am an husband man for man taught me to be an heardman from my youth That is I was neuer brought vp and fitted for the seruice of a Prophet where into I did foolishly thrust my selfe and therefore I will leaue that calling vnto more sufficient men and whereas I was brought vp to the trade of a husband-man heard-man I will henceforth follow that calling that I may eate my bread with a good conscience with Gods blessing though my reputation and maintenance be lesse This is to cast thy burden vpon God If thy ambition and couetousnes did not make thee intrude but men had good opinion of thy sufficiencie as Pharao had of Iosephs wisdome thou hast vsed no cunning to draw them to haue such opinion of thee but they simplie out of their owne obseruation iudged well of thee and imposed a charge vpon thee not being yet so ripe in iudgemēt and otherwise as thou wouldest be and hadst neede to bee in this case there is a good calling of God to giue thee hope of his further helpe though as yet thou be but as Dauid was the youngest among many brethren And the testimonie of thine owne conscience cle●…ring thee from intrusion is some ease of thy burden Plead thine honest calling plead thy cleere conscience before God and craue his fauour and if they that did chuse thee will not discharge thee pray to God for increase of strength craue the helpe of their prayers that laid the burden vpon thee and bend thy selfe with good hope vnto thy busines It is written that out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings God ordaineth strength hope well therefore in thy diligent indeuour of the assistance of God and remember what the Lord Iesus answered to Paul my grace is sufficient for thee my power is made perfect through weaknes and what the Apostle saith of himselfe assisted with this sufficient grace of Iesus Christ. I am able to doe all things through the helpe of Christ that strengthneth me and make vse of these testimonies studying striuing praying and vsing all meanes and helps for increase of sufficiencie And take that as spoken to thee that Paul spake to Timothi●… These things exercise and giue thy selfe vnto them that it may be seene how thou profitest among allmen This is the waie of casting this burden vpon God If thy sufficiencie be good and thy diligence answerable so that thy conscience witnesseth that thy labour in the Lords Vineyard is faithfull labour but the effect answereth not and the work goeth not forward because the re are that oppose their vtter most power against thy labours to crosse the successe of them And there is scarce any one good worke that a man of publike calling can take in hand but the Diuell hath one instrument or other to crosse the attempt and hinder the successe so did the Sorcerers of Egypt withstand the message of Moses and Aaron comming vnto Pharao in the name of the Lord. So did Rehum and Simshai with their companions with Tatuai and Sauballat and T●…biah withstand to their vttermost power and cunning the worke of the Iewes in building the Temple wales of Ierusalem after their returne from the captiutie When Elias had slaine the Priestes of Baal and sought to bring backe Israel to the worship of the Lord Iesabel opposed hi●… selfe and made Elias to flie for his life And while the Apostles preached the Gospell of Christ to the Gentiles the vnbeleeuing Iewes stirring vp the Gentiles withstood them in all places as the Apostle chargeth them saying They haue persecuted vs and God they please not and are contrarie to all men and forbid vs to preach vnto the Gentiles that they might be saued Thus vsually through Sathans enuie it falleth out that scarce any attempteth any commendable worke but that one or other instrument of Sathan ariseth opposing himselfe against it to hinder the performance of it increasing his burden that trauelleth about it How shall men thus vexed cast their burden vpon the Lord First when thou seest their mallice and opposition be not driuen from thy patience and peaceable minde lest thou also shouldest either say or doe amisse in thy vnquiet passion Secondly vnto this patience ioyne prayer vnto God and in thy prayer craue these things of God First that God will oppose his helpe against their opposition and hinder their hindring attempts as the Prophet doeth saying Let not the wicked haue his desire O Lord performe not his wicked thoughts Secondly craue the assistance of Gods hand vpon thy labour good indeuor to helpe thee against thine opposites as the Prophet doeth saying Giue vs helpe against trouble for vaine is the helpe of man through God we shall doe valiantly Lastly that he will take thy good enterprise into his hand and vse thee as his instrument to effect so good a worke by as also the Prophet doth saying Let the beautie of the Lord our God be vpon vs and direct the worke of our hands vpon vs euen direct the worke of our handes Surely in this case this is to cast our burden vpon God if withall when we see the end to fall out contrarie to our godly purpose we glorifie God therein supposing that as God would not let Dauid build his Temple but reserued it to be performed afterward by Salomon so God for some secret cause will not haue that good worke finished by thee but res●…rueth it for some other time and some other person Lastly if thy sufficiencie be good and thy diligence answereable to thy sufficiencie and the worke effected through Gods helpe be answereable to thy diligence but the malice of mē misconstrue thy worke and misreport it so bring thee into danger and trouble as Amaziah the wicked Priest of Bethel misreported the godly seruice of the Prophet Amos and accused him to the King saying Amos hath conspired against thee in the midst of the house of Israel The land is not able to beare all his words So seeking betray his life into the handes of cruelty vnder shewes of iustice Then the casting of our burden vpon God is first in his name to protest ou●… innocencie and that we haue done our dutie with an honest heart as God commaunded vs. So did Amos after Amaziah had accused him saying for himselfe The Lord tooke me as I followed the stocke