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A77618 The silent soul, with soveraign antidotes against the most miserable exigents: or, A Christian with an olive-leaf in his mouth, when he is under the greatest afflictions, the sharpest and sorest trials and troubles, the saddest and darkest providences and changes, with answers to divers questions and objections that are of greatest importance, all tending to win and work souls to bee still, quiet, calm and silent under all changes that have, or may pass upon them in this world, &c. / By Thomas Brooks preacher of the Word at Margarets New Fish-street London, and pastor of the Church of Christ meeting there. Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1660 (1660) Wing B4962A; Thomason E1876_1; ESTC R209789 146,060 409

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a wet some in a moist clay and some in a sandy dry ground So every spiritual husbandman must observe the fittest times to sow his spiritual seed in hee hath heavenly seed by him for all occasions and seasons for spring and fall for all grounds heads and hearts now whether the seed sown in the following Treatise bee not suitable to the times and seasons wherein wee are cast is left to the judgement of the prudent Reader to determine if the Author had thought otherwise this babe had been stifled in the womb Fifthly The good acceptance that my other weak labours have found God hath blest them not onely to the Rom. 15. 21 Phil. 1. 9 10 11 conviction the edification confirmation and consolation of many but also to the conversion of many God is a free Agent to work by what hand hee pleases and sometimes hee takes pleasure 1 Cor. 1. 17 29 to do great things by weak means that no flesh may glory in his presence God will not despise the day of small things and who or what art thou that darest despise that day the Spirit breathes upon whose preaching and writing hee John 3 pleases and all prospers according as that wind blows Sixthly That all afflicted and distressed Christians may have a proper salve for every sore a proper remedy against every disease at hand as every good man so every good book is not Prov. 25. 11 That remedy is no remedy that is not proper to the dis●ase fit to bee the afflicted mans companion but this is here hee may see his face his head his hand his heart his way his works here hee may see all his diseases discovered and proper remedies proposed and applied here hee may finde Arguments to silence him and means to quiet him when it is at worst with him in every storm here hee may finde a tree to shelter him and in every danger here hee may finde a City of Refuge to secure him and in every d●fficulty here hee may have a light to guide him and in every peril here hee may finde a buckler to defend him and in every distress here hee may finde a cordial to strengthen him and in every trouble here hee may finde a staff to support him Seventhly To satisfie some bosome-friends some faithful friends man is made to bee a friend and apt for friendly offices hee that is not friendly is not worthy to have a friend and hee that hath a friend and doth ●ot shew h●mself friendly is not worthy to bee accounted a man friendship is a kinde of life without which there is no comfort of a mans life Christian friendship 1 Sam. 22. 1 2. 3. ties such a knot that great Alexander cannot cut Summer friends I value not but winter friends are worth their weight in gold and wh● can deny such any thing especially in th●se daies wherein real faithful constant friends are so rare to bee found O● my friends I have never a friend said Socrates a friend is a very mutable creature saith Plato The friendship of most men in these daies is like Jonahs Gourd now very promising and flourishing and anon fading and withering it is like some plants in the water which have broad leaves on the surface of the water but scarce any root at all their friendship is like Lemons cold within hot without their expressions are high but their affections are low they speak much but do little as Drumms and Trumpets and Ensigns in a battel make a great noise and a fine shew but act nothing so these counterfeit friends will complement highly how hansomely speak plausibly and promise lustily and yet have neither a hand nor a heart to act any thing cordially or faithfully from such friends it is a mercy to bee delivered And therefore King Antigonus was wont to pray to God that hee would protect him from his friends and when one of his Council asked him why hee prayed so hee returned this answer every man will shun and defend himself against his professed enemies but from our professed or pretended friends of whom few are faithful none can safe-guard himself but hath need of protection from Heaven but for all this there are some that are real friends faithful friends active friends winter friends bosome-friends fast friends and for their sakes especially those among them that have been long very long under the Smarting Rod and in the fiery Furnace and that have been often poured from vessel to vessel have I once more appeared in Print to the world Eighthly and lastly There hath not any Authors or Author come to my hand that hath handled this subject as I have done and therefore I do not know but it may bee the more grateful and acceptable to the world 1 Thes 1. 7 8 2 Cor. 8. 10. ch 9. 1 ● and if by this assay others that are more able shall bee provoked to do more worthily upon this subject I shall therein rejoyce I shall onely add that though much of the following matter was preached upon the Lords visitation of my dear yoak-fellow my self and some other friends yet there are many things of special concernment in the following Tract that yet I have not upon any accounts communicated to the world And thus I have given you a true and faithful account of the reasons that have prevailed with m●e to publish this Treatise to the wo●ld and to dedicate it to your selves Secondly The second thing promised was the giving of you a little good ● unsel that you may so read the following discourse as that it may turn much to your souls advantage for as many fish and catch nothing so many read Luke 5. 5 good books and get nothing because they rea● them over cursorily slightly superficially but hee that would read to profit must then First Read and look up for a blessing Paul may plant and Apollo may water but all will be to no purpose except the Lord give the encrease God must 1 Cor. 3. 6 7 do the deed when all is done or else all that is done will do you no good if you would have this work successeful and effectual you must look off from man and look up to God who alone can make it a blessing to you As without a blessing Micah 6. 14. from Heaven thy cloaths cannot warm thee nor thy food nourish thee nor physick cure thee nor friends comfort thee So without a blessing from Hag. 1. 6. Heaven without the precious breathings and influences of the Spirit what here is done will do you no good it will not turn to your account in the day of Christ and therefore cast an eye heaven-wards It is Sencca's observation that the husbandmen in Egypt never look up to Heaven for Rain in the time of drought but look after the overflowing of the banks of Nilus as the onely cause of their plenty Ah! how many are there in these daies who when
they go to read a book never look up never look after the Rain of Gods blessing but onely look to the River Nilus they onely look to the wit the learning the Arts the parts the eloquence c. of the Author they never look so high as Heaven and hence it comes to pass that though these read much yet they profit little Secondly Hee that would read to profit must read and meditate meditation Animae viaticum est meditatio Bern. Lectio sine meditatione arida est meditatio sine lectione erronea est oratio sine meditatione livida est August is the food of your souls it is the very stomach and natural heat whereby spiritual truths are digested A man shall as soon live without his heart as hee shall bee able to get good by what hee reads without meditation Prayer saith Bernard without meditation is dry and formal and reading without meditation is useless and unprofitable Hee that would bee a wise a prudent and an able experienced states-man must not hastily ramble and run over many Cities Countries Customes Laws and Manners of People without serious musing and pondering upon such things as may make him an expert States-man So hee that would get good by reading that would compleat his knowledge and perfect his experience in spiritual things must not slightly and hastily ramble and run over this book or that but ponder upon what hee reads as Mary pondered the saying of the Angel in her heart Lord saith Austin the more I meditate on thee the sweeter thou art to mee So the more you shall meditate on the following matter the sweeter it will be to you they usually thrive best who meditate most meditation is a soul-fatning duty it is a grace-stergthning duty it is a duty-crowning duty Gerson calls meditation the nurse of prayer Hier 〈…〉 calls it his Paradise Basil calls it the treasury where all the graces are lock'd up Theophylact calls it the very gate and portal by which wee enter n●o glory and Ari●t●●le though a Heathen placeth felicity in the contemplation of the mind you may read much and ●ear much yet without meditation you will never bee excellent you will never bee eminent Christians Thirdly Read and try what thou readest take nothing upon trust but all upon trial As those Noble Bereans 1 Joh. 4. 10 Act. 17. 10 11. did You will try and tell and weigh gold though it be handed to you by your Fathers and so should you all those heavenly truths that are handed to you by your spiritual Fathers I hope upon trial you will finde nothing but what will hold weight in the ballance of the sanctuary and though all bee not gold that glisters yet I judge that you will finde nothing here to glister that will not be found upon trial to be true gold Fourthly Read and do read and practise what you read or else all your Augustine speaking of the Scripture saith verba vivenda non legenda reading will do you no good hee that hath a good book in his hand but not a lesson of it in his heart or life is like that Ass that carries rich burdens and feeds upon thistles In divine account a man knows no more than hee do●h Profession without practice will but make a man twice told a childe of darkness to speak well is to sound like a Cymbal Isiodorus but to do well is to act like an Angel hee that practiseth what hee reads and understands God will help him to understand Joh. 7. 16 17 Psal 119. 98 99 100 what he understands not there is no fear of knowing too much though there is much fear in practising too little the most doing man shall bee the most knowing man the mightiest man in practice will in the end prove the mightiest man in Scripture Theory is the guide of practice and practice is the life of Theory Salvian relates Salvianus de G. D. l. 4. how the Heathen did reproach some Christians who by their lewd lives made the Gosbel of Christ to bee a reproach where said they is that good Law which they do beleeve where are those rules of godliness which they do learn they read the holy Gospel and yet are unclean they hear the Apostles writings and yet live in drunkenness they follow Christ and yet disobey Christ they proprofess a holy Law and yet do lead impure lives Ah! how may many Preacher stake up sad complaints against many Readers in these daies they read our works and yet in their lives they deny Seneca had rather bee sick than idle and do nothing our works they praise our works and yet in their conversations they reproach our works they cry up our labours in their discourses and yet they cry them down in their practices Yet I hope better things of you into whose hands this Treatise shall fall The Samaritan woman did not fill her pi●●her with water that shee might talk Joh. 4. 7. Gen. 30. 15 of it but that she might use it and Rachel did not desire the Mandrakes to hold in her hand but that shee might thereby be the more apt to bring forth The Application is easie But Fifthly Read and apply reading is but the drawing of the bow application is the hitting of the white the choicest truths will no further profit you than they are applied by you you were The plaister will nor heal if it bee not applied as good not to read as not to apply what you read No man attains to health by reading of Galen or by knowing Hippocrates his Aphorisms but by the practical application of them all the reading in the world will never make for the health of your souls except you apply what you read the true reason why many read so much and profit so little is because they do not apply and bring home what they read to their own souls But Sixthly and lastly Read and pray hee that makes not conscience of praying over what hee reads will finde little Prayer is porta caeli ●lav●s p●r●disi sweetness or profit in his reading no man makes such earnings of his reading as hee that praies ove● what hee reads Luther professeth that hee profited more in the knowledge of the Scriptures by prayer in a short space than by study in a longer A● John by weeping got the sealed book open so certainly men would gain much more than they do by reading good mens wo●ks if they would but pray more over what they read Ah Christians pray before you read and pray after you read that all may bee blest and sanctified to you when you have done reading usually close up thus So let mee live so let mee die That I may live eternally And when you are in the Mount fo● your selves bear him upon your hearts who is willing to spend and 2 Cor. 12. 15 bee spent for your sakes for your souls O pray for mee that I may more and
more bee under the rich influences and glorious pourings out of the Spirit that I may bee an able Minister of the New Testament 2 Cor. 3. 6 not of the Letter but of the Spirit that I may alwaies finde an everlasting spring and an overflowing fountain within mee which may alwaies make mee faithful constant and abundant in the work of the Lord And that I may live daily under those inward teachings of the Spirit that may inable mee to speak from the heart to the heart from the co●science to the conscience and from experience to experience that I may bee a burning and a shining light that everlasting arms may bee still under mee that whilst I live I may bee serviceable to his Glory and his Peoples good that no discouragements may discou●age mee in my work and that when my work is done I may give up my account with joy and not with grief I shall follow these poor labours with my weak prayers that they may contribute much to your internal and eternal welfare And so rest Your souls servant in our dearest Lord THOMAS BROOKS THE MUTE CHRISTIAN Under the SMARTING ROD. PSAL. 39. 9. I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it NOt to trouble you with a tedious Preface wherein usually is a flood of words and but a drop of matter This Psalm consists of two parts the first Exegetical or narrative the second Eutical or precative a Narration and Prayer take up the whole In the former you have the Prophets Disease discovered and in the latter the Remedy applied My Text falls in the latter part where you have the way of Davids cure or the means by which his soul was reduced to a still and quiet temper I shall give a little light into the words and then come to the point that I intend to stand upon I was dumb the Hebrew word Some read it thus I should have been dumb and not have opened my mouth according to my first resolution vers 1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to bee mute tongue-tied or dumb the Hebrew word signifies also to binde as well as to bee mute and dumb because they that are dumb are as it were tongue-tied they have their lips stitcht and bound up Ah the sight of Gods hand in the afflictions that was upon him makes him lay a law of silence upon his heart and tongue I opened not my mouth because thou didst it hee looks thorow all secondary causes to the first cause and is silent hee sees a hand of God in all and so sits mute and quiet the sight of God in an affliction is of an irresistable efficacy to silence the heart and to stop the mouth of a gracious man In the words you may observe three things 1 The person speaking and that is David David a King David a Saint David a man after Gods own heart David a Christian and here we are to look upon David not as a King but as a Christian as a man whose heart was right with God 2 The action and carriage of David under the hand of God in these words I was dumb and opened not my mouth 3 The reason of this humble and sweet carriage of his in those words because thou didst it the Proposition is this Doct. That it is the great duty and concernment of gracious souls to bee mute and silent under the greatest afflictions the saddest providences and sharpest trials that they meet with in this world For the opening and clearing up of this great and useful truth I shall enquire First What this silence is that is here pointed at in the Proposition Secondly What a gracious a holy silence doth include Thirdly What this holy silence doth not exclude Fourthly The Reasons of the point and then bring home all by way of application to our own souls For the first What is the Silence here meant I answer there is a sevenfold Silence First There is a Stoical Silence the Stoicks of old thought it altogether below a man that hath reason and understanding either to rejoyce in any good or to mourn for any evil but this Stoical Silence is such a sinful unsensibleness as is very provoking to a holy God Isa 26. 10 11. God will make the most insensible sinner sensible either of his hand here or of his wrath in Hell It is a Heathenish and a horrid sin to be without natural affections Rom. 1. 31. And of this sin Quintus Fabius Maximus seems to be foulely guilty who when hee heard that his Mother and Wife whom he dearly loved were slain by the fall of an house and that his younger son a brave hopeful young man died at the same time in Umbria hee never changed his countenance but went on with the affairs of the Common-wealth as if no such calamity had befallen him this carriage of his spoke out more stupidity than patience And so Harpalus was not at all appalled when hee saw two of his sons laid ready drest in a charger when Astyages had bid him to Supper this was a sottish insensibleness Certainly if the loss of Job 36. 13 Isa 57. 1 a childe in the house bee no more to thee than the loss of a Chick in Hos 7. 9 Balaams Asse reproves this dumbness the yard thy heart is base and sordid and thou mayest well expect some sore awakening judgement This age is full of such Monsters who think it below the greatnesse and magnanimity of their spirits to bee moved affected or afflicted with any afflictions that befalls them I know none so ripe and ready for H●ll as these Aristotle speaks of Fishes that though they have spears thrust into their sides yet they awake not God thrusts many a sharp spear thorow many a sinners heart and yet hee feels nothing hee complains of nothing these mens souls will bleed to death Seneca reports of Senecio Cornelius who minded his body more than his Epist 10. soul and his m●ny more than Heaven when hee had all the day 〈◊〉 waited on his dying friend 〈◊〉 his friend was dead hee re 〈◊〉 his house s●ps merrily 〈◊〉 himself quickly goes to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his sorrows were ended and the time of his mourning expired before his deceased friend was interred Such stupidity is a curse that many a man lies under But this Stoical Silence which is but a sinful fullenness is not the Silence here meant Secondly There is a Politick Silence Many are silent out of policy should they not bee silent they should lay themselves more open either to the rage and fury of men or else to the plots and designs of men to prevent which they are silent and will lay their hands upon their mouths that others may not lay their hands upon their estates lives or liberties And Saul also went home to Giheah 1 Sam. 26. 27 and there went with him a band of men whose hearts God had touched But the
on the other side of him and there hee sees infernal fiends in fearful shapes amazing and terrifying of him and waiting to receive his despairing soul as soon as shee shall take her leave of his wretched body hee looks above him and there hee sees the gates of Heaven shut against him hee looks beneath him and there hee sees hell gaping for him and under these sad sights hee is full of secret conclusions against his own soul there is mercy for others saith the despairing soul but none for mee grace and favour for others but none for mee pardon and peace for others but none for mee As that despairing Pope said the cross could do him no good because hee had so often sold it blessedness and happiness for others but none for mee there is no help there is no hope no Jer. 2. 25. ch 18. 1● this seems to be his case who died with this desperate saying in his mouth spes fortuna v●lete farewel life and hope together Now under these dismal apprehensions and sad conclusions about its present and future condition the despairing soul sits silent being filled with amazement and astonishment Psal 77. 4. I am so troubled that I cannot speak But this is not the Silence here meant But Seventhly and lastly There is a prudent Silence a holy a gracious Silence a Silence that springs from prudent principles from holy principles and from gracious causes and considerations and this is the Silence here meant And this I shall fully discover in my Answers to the second Question which is this Quest 2 What doth a prudent a gracious a holy Silence include Answer 1 It includes and takes in these eight things First It includes a sight of God and an acknowledgement of God as the author of all the afflictions that come upon us And this you have plain in the Text I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it The Psalmist In second causes many times a Christian may see much envy hatred malice pride c. But in the first cause he can see nothing but grace and mercy sweetness and goodness looks through secondary causes to the first cause and so sits mute before the Lord. There is no sickness so little but God hath a finger in it though it bee but the aking of the little finger As the Scribe is more eyed and properly said to write than the pen and hee that maketh and keepeth the Clock is more properly said to make it go and strike than the wheels and weights that hang upon it and as every work-man is more eyed and properly said to effect his works rather than the tools which hee useth as his instruments so the Lord who is the chief Agent and mover in all actions and who hath the greatest hand in all our afflictions is more to bee eyed and owned than any inferiour or subordinate causes whatsoever So Job hee beheld God in all Job 1. 21. The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away Had hee not seen God in the affliction hee would have cried out Oh these wretched Chaldeans they have plundred and spoiled mee These wicked Sabeans they have robbed and wronged mee Job discerns Gods Commission in the Chaldeans and the Sabeans hands and then laies his own hand upon his mouth So Aaron beholding the hand of God in the untimely death of his two sons holds his peace Levit. 10. 3. the sight of God in this sad stroak is a bridle both to his mind and mouth hee neither mutters nor murmurs So Joseph saw the hand of God in his brethrens selling of him into Egypt Gen. 45. 8. and that silences him Men that see not God in an affliction are easily cast into a feaverish fit they will quickly bee in a flame and when their passions are up and their hearts on fire they will begin to bee sawcy and make no bones of telling God to his teeth that they do well to bee angry Jonah 4. 8 9. Such as will not acknowledge God to bee the author of all their afflictions will bee ready enough to fall in with that mad principle of the Manachees who maintained the Devil to bee the Author of all calamities As if there could bee any evil of affliction in the City and the Lord have no hand in it Amos 3. 6. Such as can see the ordering hand of God in all their afflictions will with David lay their hands upon their mouths when the Rod of God is upon their backs 2 Sam. 16. 11 12. If Gods hand bee not seen in the affliction the heart will do nothing but fret and rage under affliction Secondly It includes and takes in some holy gracious apprehensions of the Majesty Soveraignty Dignity Authority and presence of that God under whose afflicting hand we are Hab. 2. 20. But the Lord is in his holy Temple let all the earth bee silent or as the Hebrew reads it bee silent all the earth before his face When God would have all the people of the earth to bee husht quiet and silent before him hee would have them to behold him in his Temple where hee sits in state in majesty and glory Zephan 1. 7. Hold thy peace at the presence of the Lord God Chat not murmure not repine not quarrel not Whist stand mute bee silent lay thy hand on thy mouth when his hand is upon thy back who is totus oculus all-eye to see as well as all hand to punish As the eyes of a well-drawn picture are fastened on thee which way soever thou turnest so are the eies of the Lord and therefore thou hast cause to stand mute before him Thus Aaron had an eye to the soveraignty of God and that silences Levit. 10. 3 Job 37. 23 24. 1 Sam. 3. 11 19. him And Job had an eye upon the majesty of God and that stills him And Elie had an eye upon the authority and presence of God and that quiets him A man never comes to humble himself nor to bee silent under the hand of God till hee comes to see the hand of God to bee a mighty hand 1 Pet. 5. 6. Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God When men look upon the hand of God as a weak hand a feeble hand a low hand a mean hand their hearts rise against his hand Who is the Lord said Pharaoh that I should obey his voice Exod. 5. 2. And till Pharaoh came to see the hand of God as a mighty hand and to feel it as a mighty hand hee would not let Israel go When Tiribazus a Noble Persian was arrested at first hee drew out his sword and defended himself but when they charged him in the Kings name and informed him that they came from the King and were commanded to bring him to the King he yeelded willingly So when afflictions arrest us we shall murmure and grumble and struggle and strive even to the death before wee shall yeeld to that God that
quiet for that God that hath taken away one childe might have took away every childe and hee that hath taken away one friend might have taken away every friend and hee that hath taken away a part of thy estate might have taken away thy whole estate therefore hold thy peace let who will murmure yet bee thou mute Sixthly It may bee thy sins have been much about thy near and dear injoyments it may bee thou hast over-loved them and over-prized them and over-much delighted thy self in them it may bee they have often had thy heart when they should have had but thy hand it may bee that care that fear that confidence that joy that should have been expended upon more noble objects hath been expended upon them thy heart Oh Christian is Christs bed of spices and it may bee thou hast beded thy mercies with thee when Christ hath been put to lye in an Luk. 2. 7 out-house thou hast had room for them when thou hast had none for him they have had the best when the worst have been counted good enough for Christ It is said of Gen. 49. 4. Ruben that hee went up to his Fathers bed Ah! how often hath one creature-comfort and sometimes another put in between Christ and your sou●s how often have your dear injoyments gone up to Christs bed It is said of the babylonians that they came in to Aholah Ezek. 23. 17. and Aholibahs bed of love may it not hee said of your near and dear mercies that they have come into Christs bed of lov● your hearts they being that bed wherein Christ Cant. 3. 7 delights to rest and repose himself Now if a husband a childe a friend shall take up that room in thy soul that is proper and peculiar to God God will either imbitter it remove it or bee the death ●f it if once the love of a wife runs out more to a servant than to her husband the Master will turn him out of doors though otherwise hee were a servant worth gold The sweetest comforts of this life they are but like treasures of Snow now do but take a handful of Snow and crush it in your hands and it will melt away presently but if you let it lye upon the ground it will continue for some time and so it is with the contentments of this world if you grasp them in your hands and lay them too near your hearts they will quickly melt and vanish away but if you will not hold them too fast in your hands nor lay them too close to your hearts they will abide the longer with you There are those that love their mercies into their graves that hug their mercies to death that kiss them till they kill them Many a man hath slain his mercies by setting too great a value upon them many a man hath ●unk his ship of mercie by taking up in it over-loved mercies are seldome long-liv'd Ezek. 24. 21. when I take from them the joy of their glory the desire of their eyes and that whereupon they set their minds their sons and their daughters the way to lose your mercies is to indulge them the way to destroy them is to fix your minds and hearts upon them thou mayest write bitterness and death upon that mercie first that hath first taken away thy heart from God Now if God hath stript thee of that very mercy with which thou hast often committed spiritual Adultery and Idolatry hast thou any cause to murmure hast thou not rather cause to hold thy peace and to be mute before the Lord Christians your hearts are Christs royal Throne and in this Throne Christ will bee chief as Pharaoh said to Joseph Gen. 41. 40. hee will endure no competitor if you shall attempt to throne the creature bee it never so near and dear unto you Christ will dethrone it hee will destroy it hee will quickly lay them in a bed of dust who shall aspire to his royal Throne But Seventhly Thou hast no cause to murmure because of the loss of such near and dear enjoyments considering those more noble and spiritual mercies and favours that thou still enjoyest grant that Joseph is not and Benjamin is not yet Gen. 42. 36 Heb. 13. 8 Jesus is hee is yesterday and to day and the same for ever thy union and communion with Christ remains 1 Joh. 3. 9. still the immortal seed abides in thee still the Sun of Righteousness shines upon thee still thou art in favour with God still and thou art under the anointings of the Spirit still and under the influences of Heaven still c. and why then shouldest thou mutter and not rather hold thy peace I have read Jerom. of one Dydimus a godly Preacher who was blind Alexander a godly man once ask'd him whether hee was not sore troubled and afflicted for want of his sight Oh yes I said Dydimus it is a great affliction and grief unto mee then Alexander chid him saying hath God given you the excellency of an Angel of an Apostle and are you troubled for that which Rats and Mice and brute beasts have So say I Ah Ephes 1. 3 4 Christians hath God blessed you with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places hath the Lord given you himself for a portion hath hee given you his Son for your redemption and his Spirit for your instruction and will you murmure hath hee given his grac● to adorn you his promises to comfor● you his ordinances to better you and the hopes of Heaven to encourage you and will you mutter Paulinus Nolanus when his City was taken from him prayed thus Lord said hee let mee not bee troubled at the loss of my gold silver honour c. for thou art all and much more than all these unto mee in the want of all your sweetest enjoyments Christ will bee all in all unto you my Jewels are my husband said Phocion's wife Col. 3. 11 Plutar●h in vita Phocion my ornaments are my two sons said the Mother of the Gracchi my treasures are my friends said Constantius and so may a Christian under his greatest losses say Christ is my richest Jewels my chiefest treasures my best ornaments my sweetest delights look what all these things are to a carnal heart a worldly heart that and more is Christ to mee Eighthly If God by smiting thee in thy nearest and dearest inj●yments shall put thee upon a more thorow smiting and mortifying of thy dearest sins thou hast no cause to murmure God cures David of adultery by killing his endeared childe There is some Dalilah some darling some beloved sin or Psa 18. 23 Heb. 12. 1 other that a Christians calling condition constitution or temptations leads him to play withall and to hug in his own bosome rather than some other As in a ground that lieth untilled amongst the great variety of weeds there is usually some master-weed that is rifer and ranker than all the rest And as it