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A42680 XXXI sermons preached to the parishioners of Stanford-Rivers in Essex upon serveral subjects and occasions / by Charles Gibbes. Gibbes, Charles, 1604-1681. 1677 (1677) Wing G644; ESTC R25459 268,902 472

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Mercies 2. By the Indesiciency of them Though men fail in their Duty though they fail in their Obedience though they be wanting in Returning to God though their Prayers be consumed yet his Compassions are not consumed and therefore they are not consumed And this is here alleged as a Door of Hope to the prophet that God would restore that People for to that end are these words brought in this place as that which follows in four Verses of this Chapter plainly shews From hence then this Explication of the words being premised these Observations do arise 1. That the Lord in Punishing of his People doth not consume them 2. That Holy persons ascribe not the Mitigation of God's extreme Severity in his Punishments to any promeriting Cause in themselves but confess their own Sins deserve utter Consumption 3. That there are Mercies and Compassions in God towards his People 4. That these Mercies fail not 5. That the Non-consumption of God's People is to be ascribed to this 6. That the apprehension of this encourageth them to hope and wait on God for a Consummation of their Health and Peace Of these I shall speak in the order propounded and then apply them to the present state of things and so conclude I. OBSERVATION That the Lord doth not in Punishing of his People consume them This is equivalent to what God speaks in the Prophet Isaiah 57.16 I will not contend for ever neither will I be always wroth And he gives this Reason For the Spirit should fail before me and the Soul which I have made It is true the Devil is a roaring Lion that goes about seeking whom he may devour 1 Pet. 5.8 He is the Apollyon the Abaddon the Thief that comes not to save but to steal and to kill and to destroy Joh. 10.10 because the Sheep are not his own He made nothing nor hath any Love to any thing and therefore seeks not to help any but to marre and doe mischief to all that God hath made But the People of God are the work of his hands and the Sheep of his Pasture Psal 100.3 and therefore he will have a desire to the work of his hands Job 14.15 What is our work we are loth to pull down So God doubtless doth not delight as Children to make a house of Sticks and then kick it down again As he made Man after his own Image so he is not easily induced to break him He that accounts it an hainous Injury to himself to curse Man with the Tongue who is made after his Image Jam. 3.9 and is so severe against what-ever shall destroy him that it is his strict Determination for Preservation of Mankind after the Floud that he will not let the killing of Man go unrevenged but enacteth this Law among his Precepts to Noah Gen. 9.5 6. And surely your bloud of your Lives will I require at the hand of every Beast will I require it and at the hand of Man at the hands of every man's Brother will I require the Life of man Whoso sheddeth man's bloud by man shall his bloud be shed for in the Image of God made he man He doubtless is so chary of Men as not to consume them himself utterly till Iniquity is grown so daring as that there is no Remedy His own People it is true do sin and provoke God and he often brings them low yet he doth not make an utter end of them because they are not onely his Creatures as others but also his Redeemed and Chosen people Thus the Prophet Samuel told the Israelites 1 Sam. 12.20 22. Fear not ye have done all this Wickedness yet turn not aside from following the Lord but serve the Lord with all your heart For the Lord will not forsake his people for his great Name 's sake because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his People That which a man hath purchased for himself he will hardly let it be taken from him with much more reluctancy will he cast it away Though Michal had been given to another and was defiled yet David would have her again 2 Sam. 3.13 because he had espoused her to him for an hundred Foreskins of the Philistines How much less will God let go those whom he hath purchased by his Son's Bloud He will not have him destroyed by our Meat for whom Christ died Rom. 14.15 If any through the Watchman's failing to warn them perish their bloud will he require at the Watchman's hands Ezek. 3.18 Which shews that he hath a Fatherly Care of his own People that they be not consumed And though they provoke him so as to cause his Anger to wax hot against them yet in the midst of Judgment he remembers Mercy He chastiseth as a Father doth not exterminate or extirpate as an Enemy If they break his Statutes and keep not his Commandments Then he will visit their Transgression with a Rod and their Iniquity with Stripes Nevertheless his Loving-kindness he will not utterly take from them nor suffer his Faithfulness to fail Psal 89.31 32 33. Though he make a full end of all the Nations yet he will not make a full end of them but correct them in measure yet will he not leave them wholly unpunished Jer. 46.28 Wherein he manifests a mixture of Mercy and Justice And therefore in the next place II. OBSERVATION Holy persons ascribe not the Mitigation of God's extreme Severity in his Punishments to any promeriting Cause in themselves but confess their own Sins deserve utter Consumption This was the acknowledgment of Ezra Thou our God hast punished us less then our Iniquities deserve Ezra 9.13 Though the Punishment of the Jews were exceeding great insomuch that our Prophet Lament 4.6 compares it to the Punishment of the Sin of Sodom and aggravates it as secundùm quid in some respect greater then it yet to speak simply and absolutely there was an ingredient of Mercy that did allay it and therefore they acknowledge their Sins to have deserved greater Evils then they felt Whence in all their Addresses to God they ascribe Righteousness to their Maker and take all the Blame of their Sufferings on themselves In the same Chapter vers 15. O Lord God of Israel saith Ezra thou art Righteous for we remain yet escaped as at this day But most fully the Prophet Daniel Chapter 9.11 12 13 14. We have sinned against the Lord our God And he hath confirmed the words which he spake against us by bringing upon us a great Evil for under the whole Heaven hath not been done as hath been done upon Jerusalem Yet made we not our Prayer before the Lord our God that we might turn from our Iniquities and understand thy Truth Therefore hath the Lord watched upon the Evil and brought it upon us for the Lord our God is Righteous in all his works which he doeth for we obeyed not his voice See also vers 5 6 c. of the same Chapter And indeed such Acknowledgments are
Sins have withholden good things from you Jer. 5.25 We may then thank our selves for all the Evils that come upon us we must not cast them upon Destiny Stars or any other Cause and leave out the principal Cause which is the plague of our own hearts God is neither the Authour of Sin nor the Punisher of Sin without cause It is the Devil's property to rejoyce in Evil and therefore as he tempts to Sin so he delights to torment It is otherwise with God Afflictions are Opus alienum his strange work He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men To crush under his feet all the prisoners of the earth Lament 3.33 34. Is God unrighteous who taketh Vengeance I speak as a man God forbid for then how shall God judge the world saith the Apostle Rom. 3.5 6. We deny not that God might impose Sufferings on him that had no Sin of himself He made his Son to be Sin for us who knew no Sin 2 Cor. 5.21 Job's Calamities came on him by God's Permission though he were an upright man one that feared God and eschewed Evil Job 1.8 that he might prove his Integrity by his great Patience Of the Son who was born blind Christ saith Joh. 9.3 Neither hath this man sinned nor his Parents that is there was no special Sin committed by either of them as his Disciples deemed which was the immediate cause of his Blindness but it came to pass that the works of God should be made manifest in him The Holy Martyrs suffered for Righteousness sake and were therefore to count it all Joy when they fell into manifold Temptations But in such Evils as their Circumstances demonstrate to be from a more then common Hand of God specially when they are publick and universal as we are to acknowledge the Finger of God in them so we are to discern them to be the fruit of our doings and the work of our hands The Scripture styles them God's Judgments and we are sure saith the Apostle Rom. 2.2 that the Judgment of God is according to truth against them that commit such things And therefore though we are not allowed to judge of the afflicted as greater Sinners then others and point out them as the Causes of common Calamities yet we are to judge our selves and impute the Evil what-ever it be to our own Sins Moses the man of God in the 109. Psalm which was made in a time of great Mortality such as is now with us having said to God vers 7. We are consumed by thine Anger and by thy Wrath we are troubled addes vers 8. Thou hast set our Iniquities before thee and our secret Sins in the light of thy countenance It is true that all outward things happen alike to all there is in publick Calamities especially one event to the Righteous and to the Wicked No man knoweth love or hatred by all that is before him Eccles. 9.1 2. Yet even in these and all other that of the Prophet Lament 3.39 40. is necessary for every person to mind Wherefore doth a living man complain a man for the punishment of his Sins Let us search and try our ways and turn again unto the Lord. Though in this day of God's Visitation we may discern many common and open Sins the increase of which may be judged the Cause wherefore God brings this sore Scourge of the Pestilence in such a manner at such a time in those places on which it lights considering that God shoots not at Rovers but at a certain Mark and so the consideration of the Practices of the Persons and Places may justly lead us to determine that such Sins as have been by them and there committed are the Sins God punisheth for instance the Uncleanness Riot Profaneness and other Sins committed among us have brought down this Vengeance on our great City yet since there are particular Sins also with us and there is never a one of us but hath his secret Sins perhaps our Security putting far from us the Evil day living in Ease and Pleasure Unmercifulness and Insensibleness of the Afflictions of others secret Atheism Lukewarmness in Religion leaving our first Love Backsliding from our Profession secret Hypocrisie Formality without the Power of Godliness which may cause Christ to spue us out of his mouth it is necessary that the best of us make a strict Enquiry into our own bosome-Bosome-sins and resolve that God by this his Judgment on others calls our Sins to Remembrance and presseth us to justifie him and to betake our selves to his Mercy as the Psalmist here Let thy Mercy speedily prevent us Which leads me to the II. OBSERVATION That the Removing of the Calamities which are inflicted by God when he remembers mens Sins is the effect of God's tender Mercies So it is expresly said Lament 3.22 23. It is of the Lord's Mercies that we are not consumed because his Compassions fail not They are new every morning great is thy Faithfulness Vers 32. Though he cause Grief yet will he have Compassion according to the multitude of his Mercies And hereto accord very many speeches of God concerning himself That he is the Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin as he says in his solemn Proclamation to Moses Exod. 34.6 7. Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth Iniquity and passeth by the Transgression of the Remnant of his Heritage He retaineth not his Anger for ever because he delighteth in mercy Mic. 7.18 Hence it is that the Holy Writers and all the Saints do still celebrate his Mercies as being tender abundant free rejoycing against Judgment and to instance in no other there is a whole Psalm 136. in which the close of every verse is this For his Mercy endureth for ever And this Mercy of his is the Reason of all those works of Goodness he doeth as to the World in general in causing his Sun to rise on the Just and Vnjust and being kind to the Vnthankfull and to the Evil Luk. 6.35 so as that his tender Mercies are over all his works Psal 145.9 so chiefly to his own people all whose Deliverances and Benefits are made the fruits of his Mercy Above all the great Redemption in Christ of which the Apostle thus speaks Eph. 2.4 5. God who is rich in Mercy out of the great Love wherewith he hath loved us even when we were dead in Sins hath quickned us together with Christ is the effect of the highest most transcendent and everlasting Mercy Hence in all their Praises the Godly remember his Mercies as the Prophet Isa 63.7 I will mention the Loving-kindness of the Lord and the Praises of the Lord according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us and the great Goodness towards the house of Israel which he hath bestowed on them according to his Mercies and according to the multitude of his Loving-kindnesses
him and hide him from the Face of him that sitteth upon the Throne and from the Wrath of the Lamb For the great day of his Wrath is come and who is able to stand Rev. 6.16 17. Now then Deliverance from Death must needs deserve Praise and Thanksgiving Deliverance from the greatest Evil should be received with the greatest Gratitude Deliverance from natural Death causeth Holy persons to bless God but Deliverance from Sin the cause of Death from the Wrath to come eternal Death much more This makes the Deliverance most compleat and the Thankfulness should be most ample To which is to be added 2. That the Deliverance is by God it is He that delivers the Soul from Death Now what comes from God's hand is most acceptable to them that love God A Deliverance from Death by a man doth ingage our Affections to him we think our selves obliged to him while we live who hath preserved our Life especially if he be a person of great Quality To have our Lives saved by the King whom we had provoked to be pardoned our Treason exceedingly heightens our valuation of the Benefit There is much more cause to magnifie the Goodness of God who saves his people from Death by pardoning of their Sins by advancing them to Nearness with himself who so saves from Death temporal as to give Life eternal Behold saith Hezekiah Isa 38.17 for Peace I had great Bitterness but thou hast in love to my Soul delivered it from the Pit for thou hast cast all my Sins behind thy back The Forgiveness of Sins which occasioned Death is a greater Benefit then the prolonging of Life And then it is Happiness accumulated to the height when there is not onely length of days on Earth but eternal Life in Heaven conferred upon the saved Bless the Lord O my Soul saith David Psal 103.1 2 3 4. and all that is within me bless his holy Name Bless the Lord O my Soul and forget not all his Benefits Who forgiveth all thy Sins and healeth all thy Diseases Who redeemeth thy life from destruction and crowneth thee with Loving-kindness and tender Mercies All which Mercies are the more joyfull to the believing Soul because they are not so much the fruit of our Prayers as of God's free Grace in Christ The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ so loved the World the sinfull World even when they were Enemies to him that he gave his onely-begotten Son to death even the death of the Cross that whosoever believeth on him should not perish but have everlasting Life This Deliverance from Death proceeding from God's special Love that great Love wherewith he loved us when we were dead in Trespasses and Sins quickening us together with Christ saving us by Grace is that which makes it incomprehensibly welcome and encourageth the Soul to expect farther Preservation as David doth here which brings me to the Second Part of my Text now to be handled viz. II. David's Postulation Wilt thou not deliver my Feet from falling The Expression seems to be expostulatory but is to be conceived to include a Petition He demands of God Wilt thou not c not as one that challenged it as his due desert but as assured of the Continuance of God's Goodness He deprehends in God a Fountain of Love which is still running over flowing down in farther Streams of saving Mercy We have an exact and ample Paraphrase upon the words of my Text in that passage Psal 36. from vers 5. to the end where having set out the Wickedness of men and his own Danger he breaks forth in extolling God's Goodness in an assurance of a constant Current of Mercies and then is instant with God for the Continuance of his Preservation This part of my Text is a most precious passage of great Use for your Meditation in times of Danger by reason of Pestilence or War and it shews this to be the customary practice of Holy persons to gather Arguments of Assurance of future Help from God from their experience of his former gracious Deliverances So did David 1 Sam. 17.37 when he was to fight wïth Goliah he argued thus The Lord that delivered me out of the Paw of the Lion and of the Bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine And after him S. Paul 2 Cor. 1.9 10. We had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God that raiseth the dead Who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver In his former Deliverance he perceived the Power of God that he could deliver from Death he deprehends his watchfulness over him in the Continuance of his Deliverance his Love to him and Care of him which confirms him in the expectation of farther Help for the future As they say all Vertues are concatenate in Prudence so all Mercies are linked together in God's Love and Care of his Servants And indeed so the Apostle inferrs Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things He that preserves our Lives will keep our Feet Thou hast delivered my Soul from Death wilt thou not also deliver my Feet from falling Surely thou wilt But then this Deliverance must be sought for at his hands which is also implied in this Expression When Christ cured the lame Cripple he bade him take up his bed and walk God when he saves our Life from death expects that we should walk before him Our Life is a Pilgrimage we walk from one Stage of it to another as the Sun runs its course so doth Man The Emanations of our Minds the Actions of our Members are our Steps If we walk not uprightly if we heed not what we think what we speak what we act our Feet will quickly fall first into Sin and then into Mischief The Psalmist Psal 73.2 tells us out of his experience of himself that his Feet were almost gone his Steps had well-nigh slipt He had stumbled at the Stumbling-stone to wit the Prosperity of the Wicked This begat Envy in him and that drew him on to a kind of Affection to their ways to a condemning of his own Course and offending against the generation of God's Children And had not God mercifully caught him when he was falling by directing him to the Sanctuary of God where he might see the End of the wicked that however they stood on smooth yet they were but slippery places they walked on Ice which would suddenly break under them and then they would sink for ever he had certainly perished Therefore he recovers himself and applies himself to God vers 23 24. and stays himself on the Manutenentia Divina Thou hast holden me by my right hand Thou wilt guide me with thy Counsel and after receive me to Glory As for me saith he in another Psalm 41.12 thou upholdest
XXXI SERMONS Preached to the PARISHIONERS of Stanford-Rivers in Essex Upon several Subjects and Occasions BY CHARLES GIBBES D. D. Rectour of that Church and Prebendary of Saint Peter's at Westminster Never before made publick QVI SEQVITUR ME NON AMBULAT IN TENEBRIS LO●●●● Printed by E. Flesher 〈…〉 most Sacred MAJES●● 〈…〉 To the well-beloved the PARISHIONERS Of Stanford-Rivers in the County of Essex Grace and Peace from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ be multiplied IN this Age and Nation abounding with Learned Men and Books of all sorts especially in Points of Sacred Theology I should not have thought any thing of Mine worth the Press being conscious to my self of mine own Unfitness for that Employment by reason of Age and other Imperfections had not your Importunity extorted these Papers from me which I now exhibit to you But that I might not be wanting in what I am able for your Edification in the Doctrine of Christ I have yielded to adventure an Impression of them whereunto I have been induced by a like Consideration with that of Saint Peter 2 Epist ch 1. vers 12 13 14. where his writing is declared to be out of an apprehension of his approaching Dissolution that after his Decease there might be that extant which might keep in their Remembrance that which he had taught them and wherein they were established It is part of my Rejoycing that I have had so much Ability as to hold forth the Word of God to you in any measure and that it hath found so ready Reception with you It is that which I pray for and earnestly exhort you to that you will never forget the Saving Truths you have been taught though I be buried in oblivion nor backslide to Errour or Profaneness But that you be still constant in the true Faith of Christ and the right Worship of God in publick and in your private Families seeking the Divine Benediction on your selves and Families and living in mutual Love and Helpfulness towards all as knowing that the saving Grace of God hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying Vngodliness and worldly Lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present World looking for that blessed Hope and the glorious Appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all Iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar People zealous of Good works Whereunto if this Writing or any Labour of mine may conduce I have my Desire who recommending both you and this Work to the Almighty's Blessing do yet remain Your truly loving and faithfull Servant in Christ CHARLES GIBBES A TABLE of the several TEXTS discoursed upon PSAL. VI. 6. I Am weary of my Groaning every night wash I my Bed and water my Couch with my Tears Three Sermons pag. 1 19 37. PSAL. LI. 1 2. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy Loving-kindness according to the multitude of thy tender Mercies blot out my Transgressions Wash me throughly from mine Iniquity and cleanse me from my Sin 57. PSAL. LI. 3. I acknowledge my Transgression and my Sin is ever before me 75. PSAL. LI. 11. Cast me not away from thy Presence and take not thy Holy Spirit from me Two Sermons 87 99. PROV XVIII 14. The Spirit of a man will sustain his Infirmity but a wounded Spirit who can bear Two Sermons 111 121. PSAL. CXXX 4. But there is Mercy or Forgiveness with thee that thou maist be feared 131. PSAL. LXXIX 8. O remember not against us former Iniquities let thy tender Mercies speedily prevent us for we are brought very low 153. HEBR. IV. 7. To Day if you will hear his Voice harden not your Hearts 173. ROM VI. 1. and part of 2. What shall we say then shall we continue in Sin that Grace may abound God forbid 185. LAMENT III. 22. It is of the Lord's Mercies that we are not consumed because his Compassions fail not 197. PSAL. LVI 13. For thou hast delivered my Soul from Death wilt thou not deliver my Feet from Falling that I may walk before God in the Light of the living Two Sermons 217 235. PSAL. CXIX 15. I will meditate in thy Precepts and have respect unto thy Ways 251. PSAL. CXXII 1. I was glad when they said unto me Let us goe into the House of the Lord. 263. PSAL. XXXVII 4. Delight thy self in the Lord and he shall give thee thy Heart's desire 275. 1 PET. III. 13. And who is he that will harm you if ye be Followers of that which is Good 287. PSAL. XVI 11. Thou wilt shew me the Path of life In thy Presence is fulness of Joy at thy right hand there are Pleasures for evermore Two Sermons 305 325. PSAL. LXXIII 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy Counsel and afterwards receive me to Glory 345. PSAL. XL. 8. I will both lay me down in peace and sleep for thou Lord onely makest me dwell in Safety 357. 1 JOHN III. 1. Behold what manner of Love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God 371. PSAL. CXIX 34. Give me Vnderstanding and I shall keep thy Law yea I shall observe it with my whole Heart 383. PROV XIV 2. He that walketh in his Vprightness feareth the Lord but he that is perverse in his Ways despiseth him Two Sermons 399 411. REVEL VII 15. Therefore are they before the Throne of God and serve him day and night in his Temple and he that sitteth on the Throne shall dwell among them 421. JOHN VIII 56. Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my Day and he saw it and was glad 435. GEN. XII 1. Now the Lord had said unto Abraham Get thee out of thy Country and from thy Kindred and from thy Father's House unto a Land that I shall shew thee 449. Imprimatur Febr. 27. 1676 7. Guil. Sill R. P. D. Henr. Episc Lond. à Sacris Domesticis DAVID's GROANS Part I. The First SERMON PSALM vi 6. I am weary of my Groaning every night wash I my Bed and water my Couch with my Tears THIS Psalm is intituled to David and is styled by many One or the First of his Penitentiall Psalms And it is true it expresseth his Agony and dolour of mind for his Sickness undoubtedly for his Sins as the Cause of it in likelihood and so for both as in a Psalm parallel to this he complains Psal 38.4 which two make a heavy Burthen too heavy for any man to bear The Burthen of one onely to wit of Sin though not his own made the Mighty One the Mighty God to stoop under it when he bare the Sins of Men in his own body on the Tree insomuch that as in the Garden he told his Disciples Matth. 26.38 My Soul is exceeding sorrowfull unto death so on the Cross he cried out in the Anguish of his spirit Matth. 27.46 O God my God why hast thou forsaken me No marvel then that
Estates but most carefull of his Glory APPLICATION 1. We may hereby judge of what spirit they are who neither in Sickness nor Health Adversity nor Prosperity are affected with the Worship of God with the Dishonour or Honour that is done to his Name Sure they have not the Heart of David who groaned unto weariness all the night made his Bed to swim and watered his Couch with his Tears because he wanted the opportunity of remembring God of giving him thanks in his Sanctuary by reason of his Sickness or Exile in which he was most afraid lest his Enemies should be highly injurious to God in speaking evil of him was less sensible of his own Suffering They who well or ill mind not to repair to the Assemblies to praise God that are no whit moved by the taking of God's Name in vain or the blaspheming of him if so be they may be quiet live at ease in wealth in content They are undoubtedly of a Devillish spirit that are enemies to the praising of God that inveigh against and oppose the solemn Service and Worship in holy Prayer Praises of God Preaching and Hearing of his most holy Word that deride those things and deterre men from them Much more damnable is their practice who glory in the profaning of the glorious Name of the Almighty God who make it their sport and their gallantry to abuse the High and Holy one in vain and false Swearing in direfull Blasphemies and Curses in impious Atheistical Jests and Scoffs which I wish were onely outlandish behaviour that could as heretofore be charged onely on Italianated Hispaniolized Papists that it were not the fashion of English Protestants who seem often to pray Hallowed be thy Name and when the Commandments of the First Table are read to say Lord have mercy upon us and incline our hearts to keep these Laws yet neither have God for their God nor regard his Worship nor hallow his Name nor sanctifie his Day but pollute all with their impure Tongues and foul Feet Oh that you that are guilty of so doing would tremble at the Damnation due to these Sins and you who are not guilty would mourn for these Abominations in others and be affected as David was Psal 119.136 Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law 2. If God bring Sickness or any other Affliction upon you let this be a Grievance to you that you cannot be with them that are imployed in God's Worship when you are in Health at Liberty in Peace omit not to wait on God in his solemn Service Consider how unworthy a thing it is to mind your own things as if you owed nothing to God from whom you have All to forget that He is your Maker the Father that begat you your King your Lord your God who is good kind and mercifull to you Let the thoughts of God be dear to you his Name precious Be affected like David who could not be contented to dwell in a house of Cedar when the Ark of God dwelt within Curtains 2 Sam. 7.2 Be willing to further God's Honour and the Knowledge of him more then to furnish your own Houses adorn your own Backs and make provision for your own Tables Let them be your best Friends that glorifie God most and those your Enemies that take his Name in vain And let your Sighs and Tears be as much for neglecting God's Service as for omitting the pursuance of your own Ends your own Preferments Pleasures Profits In a word where you can endeavour to recover such from their Profaneness and Ungodliness who mind not his Worship or pollute his Name by any profane speeches or behaviour pluck them as Brands out of the fire with holy zeal for God and compassion to them And if you cannot amend them yet mourn for them as Samuel did for Saul when God was departed from him 1 Sam. 15.35 And for your selves take heed of suffering as Evil-doers but be not ashamed to suffer as Christians but glorifie God therein Amen LAVS DEO DAVID's GROANS Part III. The Third SERMON PSALM vi 6. I am weary of my Groaning every night wash I my Bed and water my Couch with my Tears THIS Verse hath held us twice already Inquiry being made of the Cause of such excessive Grief as is here expressed it hath been resolved That not onely Pain of Body or Bodily Restraint drew out such Groans such a Fountain of Tears as was let out when this Psalm was made Privation of God's Worship fear of the Dishonour that might accrue to God from his Enemies Reproaching God by reason of him are intimated vers 5 7 10. to have been likewise Causes of this immoderate Sorrow And accordingly I have already handled these four Points 1. That when God's hand is on any for Sin it is heavy and intolerable 2. Beds and Couches give not Ease when God brings Sin to remembrance 3. The want of opportunity of glorifying God is very grievous to a person that is Godly when he is under Affliction 4. That it aggravates his Affliction when by rearon of his Suffering Reproach is likely to be cast on God Thus far we have proceeded There is plus ultrà somewhat more to be gathered from this Flower Commonly this Psalm is styled One or the First of the Penitentiall Psalms And that these Groans and Tears were for Sin hath been gathered partly from other parallel places Psal 38.1 2 3 4. Psal 39.11 Psal 40.12 Psal 41.4 and others from the Prayer here vers 1. wherein he acknowledgeth his present Affliction Rebukes and Chastening from God and therefore for Sin and vers 8. ascribes an audible Voice to his weeping which argues his Tears were for Sin and with Supplication for its Pardon And hence these Conclusions or Propositions have been deduced 5. That Affliction brings Sin to Remembrance and that the Groans and Tears and Disquietness of an Holy person under his Affliction are as well or more for his Sins then for his Sufferings 6. In such sense of Misery or Sin the pious Penitent person bemoaneth himself to God confesseth bewaileth his Sin humbleth himself before him deprecateth his Wrath and earnestly seeketh by Prayer and Supplication for Forgiveness of Sin Healing and Peace from God And of these with Divine assistence I shall now speak V. PROPOSITION That Affliction brings Sin to Remembrance and that the Groans and Tears and Disquietness of an Holy person under his Affliction are as well or more for his Sins then for his Sufferings 1. That Affliction brings Sin to Remembrance is manifest by many Instances When the Sons of Jacob were in streights by reason of Joseph's seeming rough dealing with them in Egypt and his imprisoning one of them then they remembred their Sin which it seems they minded not before Gen. 42.21 And they said one to another We are verily guilty concerning our Brother in that we saw the anguish of his Soul when he besought us and we would not hear
therefore is this distress come upon us When Adonibezek was caught and his Thumbs and great Toes cut off he could then remember Threescore and ten Kings having their Thumbs and great Toes cut off gathered their meat under my Table as I have done God hath requited me Jos 1.7 The Widow of Sarepta that entertained Elijah the Prophet when her Son was dead expressed her self in a fit of passion to Elijah What have I to doe with thee O thou man of God art thou come unto me to call my Sin to remembrance and to slay my Son 1 King 17.18 Even holy Job though an upright and perfect man one that feared God and eschewed evil yet in the time of his Affliction complains that God did write bitter things against him and made him to possess the Iniquities of his youth Job 13.26 When Manasseh was bound in fetters and carried to Babylon then he humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers 2 Chron. 33.11 12. When Jerusalem that slighted the many Warnings of the Prophets that were sent to her was taken by Nebuchadnezzar and the people carried captive to Babylon then they could remember that they had grievously sinned and therefore were removed Lament 1.7 8. And indeed this is the very End of God's Afflictions to bring mens Sins into Remembrance In their Prosperity men are secure they mind their Pleasures think not of the Reckoning they are like men that are filled with Wine fast asleep and heed not what is said of them or to them or what is near them or intended to be done to them and so are not moved at all by any Counsells or Warnings given them by God or man When Wisedome calls they refuse to hearken when she stretcheth out her hands no man regards it their Prosperity destroys them Prov. 1.24 32. Yea because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to doe evil Eccles. 8.11 And therefore as men use to doe when a person is thus asleep and the house is on fire or an Enemy is coming they jog and pinch and if need be whip and scourge and beat such a drowzy person to awaken him that he may escape the fire or the sword that he may perceive his folly and his danger so doth God deal with men that sin even the best when they abuse their Prosperity so as to grow secure in Sin or to become dull and sluggish about the work God requires of them he visits them with some Affliction or other which may bring their Sin to mind he hedgeth up their way with thorns and makes a wall that they may not find their paths as it is Hos 2.6 What the Lord often inculcates to us concerning our Children he is not wanting to observe towards his own He tells us that Foolishness is bound in the heart of a Child but the Rod of Correction shall drive it far from him Prov. 22.15 The Rod of Reproof gives wisedom but a Child left to himself bringeth his Mother to shame Prov. 29.15 And therefore he often chargeth Parents to correct their Children Correct thy Son and he shall give thee rest yea he shall give delight unto thy soul Ibid. vers 17. Chasten thy Son while there is hope and let not thy Soul spare for his Crying Prov. 19.18 Yea he saith Prov. 13.24 He that spareth his Rod hateth his Son but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes And accordingly the Lord who is wise and knows how to handle his own Children when he doth perceive them careless and heedless of their Duty secure in their Sin sets their Sin before them making it legible by some Correction that they may discern their Fault by their Punishment and being humbled for the one may remove the other As many as I love saith Christ I rebuke and chasten Revel 3.19 Which is no other then what the Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrews 12.5 6. tells them My Son despise not thou the Chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth Which is the same that Solomon had said My Son despise not the Chastening of the Lord neither be weary of his Correction For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth even as a Father the Son in whom he delighteth Prov. 3.11 12. And before him Eliphaz in Job 5.17 Behold happy is the man whom God correcteth therefore despise not thou the Chastening of the Almighty The nature of all the Afflictions which God inflicts on any is Castigation or Vindication It was not for any special Sin of the Child or Parents that the man mentioned Joh. 9.2 3. was born blind nor that Job was under so many Calamities as we reade of was it because of any presumptuous Sin that he was chargeable with but that in the one the works of God might be made manifest in him in the other that his Sincerity might be tried that he did not serve God for his outward Prosperity Yet there was Sin in them and one Use of those Visitations was to shew the Evil of Sin All God's punitive Acts are Judgments even his own Children are judged for Sin though when they are judged they are chastened of the Lord that they might not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11.32 Though the Avengement or vindictive Satisfaction be laid on Christ so as that he bears the Iniquities of his Children yet their own Sufferings are from God's Justice occasioned by their Sins as the impulsive cause though not intended in Satisfaction to his Justice as the final cause Hence it is that some are so blinded that when the Hand of God is lifted up they will not see Isa 26.11 And some when they have been stricken have not grieved when consumed have refused to receive Correction have made their faces harder then a Rock have refused to return have been so foolish as not to know the way of the Lord nor the Judgment of their God Jerem. 5.3 4. Yet so much effect hath natural Conscience had even in Infidels that it hath accused or excused them between themselves that they have judged others as knowing the Judgment of God that they who do commit great enormous Crimes are worthy of death Rom. 1.32 and 2.1 15. Even the barbarous people Act. 28.4 were so acquainted with God's avenging Justice that when they saw a Viper on S. Paul's hand they said among themselves No doubt this man is a Murtherer whom though he hath escaped the Sea yet Vengeance suffereth not to live And always those who have acquaintance with God become sensible of his Hand as David Psal 119.120 saith of himself My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy Judgments And it moves them to be affected more with their Sin then their Sufferings which is next to be considered 2. That the pious Penitent person is more afflicted
by reason of his Sin then his Sufferings that his Groaning and Tears are from the sense of his own Displeasing God more then from the sense of the Pain which God inflicts on him is apparent from the Instances we have of such Penitent persons In David's penitential Complaints it is his Sin that he still complains of Psal 31.10 My life is spent with grief and my years with sighing my strength faileth because of mine Iniquity and my bones are consumed Psal 38.3 4. There is no soundness in my flesh because of thine Anger neither is there any rest in my bones because of my Sins For mine Iniquities are gone over my head as an heavy burthen they are too heavy for me He saith not his Pain was too heavy a Burthen for him but his Iniquity which is indeed so heavy a Burthen that the Shoulders of Christ himself the Lord of Glory were so pressed with it as to make him cry out My Soul is heavy unto the death and My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Again Psal 40.12 he bemoans his case that innumerable Evils had compassed him about his Iniquities had taken hold upon him so that he was not able to look up they were more then the hairs of his head therefore his heart failed him It was not by reason of the multitude of his Evils but the multitude of his Iniquities that his heart failed him Outward Evils reach but the outward man Sins remembred lie heavy on the Conscience Now as Solomon saith Prov. 18.14 The spirit of a man will sustain his Infirmity but a wounded spirit who can bear Those Philosophers that could endure the greatest Tortures of body inflicted by cruel Tyrants while they had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tranquillity of mind within yet could not bear the least Pain when the Conscience of some foul Evil haunted them A great Burthen will be born by a whole Shoulder but the least Burthen pains intolerably when the Bone is broken or it lies on a Sore place A broken spirit drieth up the bones Prov. 17.22 My Sin saith David is ever before me and that brake his Bones Where Sin as it is said of Antipheron Oretanus that his Shadow was always before him is still before a man it haunteth and vexeth him as a Hornet or as the Poets feign of the Furies which the Oratour interprets of a guilty Conscience it still affrights him Lament 1.14 The yoke of my Transgressions is bound by his hand The yoke they felt they term the yoke of their Transgressions intimating that by reason of their Transgressions their Afflictions were as a yoke bound by God's hand and wreathed and came upon their neck And in like manner Isa 64.5 6 7. the afflicted Penitents pour out their Souls before God thus Behold thou art wroth for we have sinned We all do fade as a leaf and our Iniquities as the wind have taken us away Thou hast hid thy face from us and consumed us because of our Iniquities Herein there lies a great difference between the Sufferings of a meer Natural man and one Renewed or Regenerated by the Spirit of God The one complains of his Pain of his hard Fortune his ill Luck he frets and vexeth at his Disappointment his Sighs and Groans are that he is crost and cannot have his will he imputes his Misery to Chance Stars and the like If he weep as Esau it is not for his Profaneness but for his missing the Blessing Heb. 12.16 17. His Crying and Bitterness of spirit is not to God but Isaac Gen. 27.34 with a murtherous mind towards Jacob vers 42. Cain tells God Gen. 4.13 14. My Punishment is greater then I can bear Behold thou hast driven me out this day from the face of the earth and from thy face shall I be hid and I shall be a Fugitive and a Vagabond in the earth and it shall come to pass that every one that sindeth me shall flay me Not a word that shewed his Repentance for his devillish act in murthering his Brother It is otherwise with the Penitent S. Peter goes out and weeps bitterly not for his Danger but for his Sin The Regenerate bemoan their sinfull Corruptions not their Sufferings S. Paul that could take pleasure in Afflictions and Reproaches yet groans in his earthly Tabernacle by reason of the Sin that dwelled in him This indeed is the nature of true Repentance it begetteth a Sorrow after God such as produceth Carefulness Self-clearing Indignation Fear vehement Desire Zeal Revenge as they are said to be in the Corinthians 2 Cor. 7.11 When they remember their ways and their doings wherein they have been defiled true Repenting persons will not inveigh against others cry out of their Destiny nor censure others or impute their Evils to forrein Causes but take shame to themselves and loath themselves in their own sight for all their Evils that they have committed Ezek. 20.43 And the reason hereof is because it is their Sin which is indeed their Evil. It is that which is simply Evil their Affliction is but Malum secundùm quid Evil in some respect Evil that hath something of Good in it and which tends to some Good not onely to God's Glory and other Warning but also to his own good who is afflicted by humbling and bettering him that is truly Penitent It is good for me that I have been afflicted saith David that I might learn thy Statutes It is Sin that is the cause of all the Misery he feels and therefore that must be more evil then his Misery If a Potion be bitter by reason of Gall and Wormwood the Gall and Wormwood that makes it so must be more bitter Thine own Wickedness shall correct thee and thy Backsliding shall reprove thee know therefore and see that it is an evil thing and bitter that thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God and that my fear is not in thee saith the Lord God of hoasts to the Jews Jerem. 2.19 And indeed this is the onely way for remedy of Afflictions to be sensible of the Sin more then the Sufferings to groan and shed Tears because we have offended God not onely because we have brought Trouble on our selves It is the way to take away the Cause of the Evil and so the Bitterness of the Affliction Death it self were it not for the Sting of Sin could not harm us take away the Conscience of Sin and the weight of our Sufferings will be removed If Sin be forgiven if the Conscience be purged from dead works either God will take away the Rod or the Smart of it Now the onely way to effect that is to be affected with the Sin and to loath it to be weary of it more then the pressure of the Cross If we take any other course though we houl on our Beds though we should be weary with Groaning every night and all the night make our Bed swim and water our Couch with Tears though we should wear Sackcloath cast
your unmercifull and unrighteous dealings in your Closets regarding Pass-times more then holy Sermons reading in your Chambers rather wanton Comedies or light Poems then the Bible and Holy Writings Yea let me ask the devoutest of you whether at any time you do weep for your Sins of daily incursion Are you sensible of your too much Formality too little Fervency in your Prayers Do you weep for your vain Thoughts proud Imaginations inordinate Desires your Ignorance Forgetfulness of many Duties Slothfulness Passionateness Omissions of many Duties you should doe Uncharitableness Unthankfulness and many other Sins of Errour and secret Sins which God knows though men do not Sure a sincere Christian is a weeping Christian if God keep him from greater Enormities yet he will find cause enough to mourn for his daily Aberrations if he do as a true Penitent doth take notice of the Naughtiness of his own deceitfull Heart If you say daily the Lord's Prayer and be not sensible of your daily Sins do you not mock God when you say Forgive us our Sins Sure Christ when he directed the use of that Prayer appointed you to be examining and judging your selves every day to confess your Sins to bemoan them to ask Pardon for them to resolve and vow against them every day And Oh that God would give you a Heart of Flesh in stead of a Heart of Stone you that are guilty of more hainous Crimes such as I have named or any other your own Consciences can inform you of to imitate S. Peter to goe out immediately after this Sermon is ended and weep bitterly to break off your Sins by Righteousness as Daniel advised Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4.27 And you that though unblamable towards Men yet are conscious of offending God by any privy Transgressions yea all of you who have any remainders of sinfull Corruption in you Oh that you would not defer but this day yea every day imitate holy David in his holy vocall penitential Weeping which hath been this day described to you And let every Affliction you feel or fear specially the thought of your Death bring you to a daily practice of Repentance and Supplication unto God that your Iniquities may not be your Ruine but that your Tranquillity may be lengthned here and you may be blessed for ever in the world to come Amen LAVS DEO THE PENITENT's PRAYER The Fourth SERMON PSALM li. 1 2. Have mercy upon me O God according to thy Loving-kindness according to the multitude of thy tender Mercies blot out my Transgressions Wash me throughly from mine Iniquity and cleanse me from my Sin WE find in this Text a Sinner struck with the sense of his Sins and pleading at the Mercy-seat of God for the Remission and Forgiveness of them If the Greatness of his Person or the Sacredness of his Function had been Antidote enough against Temptation Armour of proof against the fiery darts of Satan we had not this day heard of David a Sinner for he was a King and he was a Prophet and a man after God's own heart But since neither his Profession nor his Royalty could protect him from being a Sinner and that in so foul and crimson Crimes as Adultery and Murther which occasioned the penning of this Psalm 't is happy that we yet find him here a Penitent and a complaining one for we have him here a Supplicant at his Prayers on his knees with a Miserere mei Deus Have mercy on me O God c. What S. Paul said of himself that his Fall and Recovery was a Pattern to all that should believe in Christ may be as rightly said of David The Lord permitted him to sin that no man might presume but the strongest Saint might take heed lest he fall that none might be high-minded but fear and the Lord also recovered him by Repentance and hath left his Confession and Absolution upon record that none might despair but that his Example might direct them to return to God after their Wandrings and erect and keep up their spirits from sinking by the assurance of his Mercy so remarkably vouchsafed to so great a Transgressour And therefore if there be any Soul that hears me this day struck with a deep sense and horrour of his Sins lying groaning and trembling under the heavy pressure and burthen of them let him not despair of Pardon either by reason of the Quality or Quantity of them for here are Loving-kindnesses or kind Mercies a Multitude of tender Mercies well expressed by Zachary Luk. 1.78 the Bowells of Compassion of our God such as are in a Woman or rather exceeding the Compassion of a Woman on the Son of her womb Isa 49.15 Loving-kindness of God against Unkindness of Man Bowells of Mercy towards him who had no Compassion on himself mercifull Remembrance of him who forgat his God and himself awakening and saving him who in his insensible Lethargy of Impenitence would have destroyed himself Whoever thou art know that the Holy Ghost hath recorded this Story for thy Consolation not onely set David's Fall before thee but likewise the means of his Recovery the many and tender Mercies of his God As the Prophet Nathan was sent to David so David himself is sent to thee He extends and reaches out to thee the same Physick that he took himself And therefore distrust not thy Cure but come and hear David bitterly bewailing his Condition and with him bewail sadly thine own See him weeping and weep thou as fast Hear his Voice and Cry piercing the Clouds and be not thou dumb but as loud as he till thou hast awakened the Compassion of thy God Observe all this and say with him Have mercy upon me O God c. Which words are the main Petition of this Holy Supplicant in behalf of himself for pardoning Grace out of the deep sense of his great Sins and apprehension of God's great Mercies And they exhibit to us 1. David's Malady the Disease which pained him to the heart which made him groan cry out and be instant with the great Physician of Souls for Cure which is expressed with Aggravation in three words 1. Transgression a word that notes sometimes Rebellion or Revolt from God 2. Iniquity or Perverseness importing his Unrighteousness to Vriah his Wife Himself his Child by her his whole House and People who all tasted of the bitterness of his eating that forbidden fruit 3. Sin or Errour intimating the great Folly which he now deprehended in yielding so to his Lust as to erre from God's Command and for a little Pleasure to draw on himself the Wrath of God and the Horrour of Conscience now upon him He useth not mincing or diminutive terms as those that love their Sins as fond Parents do their Children and call their Monstrosities small Blemishes but paints out his Sins in their most ugly Deformity to shew his Hatred of them to the utmost and to justifie God fully Yea he useth those very terms to express his Sins by
which God himself used in his most blessed Declaration of himself when he proclaimed of himself Exod. 34.6 7. The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and abundant in Goodness and Truth keeping Mercy for thousands forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin To which it is very likely he had an eye and that he made that Proclamation the rise of his Hope That though his Sins were great yet they were not any other then God had proclaimed of old he did forgive and after in his New Covenant he more fully assured the Condonation of them Jer. 31.34 Heb. 8.12 2. The thing David requesteth of God and that is full Remission expressed in three terms 1. Of Blotting out his Transgressions a phrase used by the Prophet Isa 43.25 and 44.22 And it intimates that his Sins were written by God in his Remembrance as in a Book of Records in the sense that Job said 13.26 and 14.17 God did write bitter things against him and sealed up his Iniquity And the blotting it out is the putting it out of his Remembrance so as not to charge it upon him nor condemn him for it as it is explained Isa 43.25 2. Of Washing him throughly from his Iniquity a term noting frequent or abundant washing that is Absolution meant by Ablution 1 Cor. 6.11 where it comprehends Justification as well as Sanctification And so it is said Revel 1.5 Christ hath washed us from our Sins in his own bloud alluding 't is likely to the cleansing of men from their Leprosy and other Legall Pollutions in the Mosaicall Law 3. The third term is Cleanse me from my Sin by Emundation meaning Emendation purifying his Heart from the love of his Sin and his Life from the practice of it any more as it is expressed Isa 1.16 17. Wash ye make you clean put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes cease to doe evil learn to doe well 3. The Third thing considerable in David's Petition which is indeed the Hindge on which all turns is the Loving-kindness or Benignity of God the Multitude of his tender Mercies such as are in the Womb or Bowells of a tender Mother towards her Child And this Loving-kindness and Multitude of tender Mercies is urged by David as the Motive the impulsive Cause or sole Reason of granting his Request of blotting out his Transgressions washing him throughly from his Iniquity and cleansing him from his Sin In the same manner as Moses pleaded with God for Israel Num. 14.17 18 19. after whose Copy this Petition seems to be framed and is an exact Pattern according to which a Penitent Supplicant is to address himself to God for Ease from under the pressure of his Sins teaching us these Points 1. That the Remembrance of his Sin is the greatest Grievance to a Penitent Sinner David complains not of other Evils incident to him and his but his own Sin 2. That a Penitent Sinner doth not mince or lessen his Sin but setteth it out or confesseth it to God in its greatest Aggravations in variety of odious Appellations when he betakes himself to God for Redress 3. That the Blotting out of our Transgressions the Washing throughly from our Iniquity the cleansing from our Sin is to be sought from God 4. That we are to beg earnestly not onely for Blotting out our Transgressions but also for through Washing and Cleansing from Iniquity and Sin not onely by Condonation of them but also by Emendation and Amendment of life 5. That it is Loving-kindness and multitude of tender Mercies which is the Motive whereupon God blotteth out Transgressions washeth throughly the guilty Sinner from Iniquity and cleanseth him from his Sin 6. That the onely way to obtain these things is to beg them of God upon this consideration and no other You see a large field and copious matter is before us in which I might exspatiate far and prosecute a long time but I will endeavour to abbreviate and end with the time I. OBSERVATION That the Remembrance of his Sin is the greatest Grievance to a Penitent Sinner This is evident from their penitential Complaints In the many mournfull Elegies of David the great Pressure of his spirit lay in the Remembrance of his Sin Psal 38.3 4 5. There is no rest in my bones because of my Sin For mine Iniquities are gone over my head as an heavy burthen they are too heavy for me My Wounds stink and are corrupt because of my Foolishness And again Psal 40.12 Innumerable Evils have compassed me about mine Iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up they are more then the hairs of my head therefore my heart faileth me It is true Afflictions are hard to be born Poverty and Disgrace and Imprisonment and Pains of body are very heavy upon many persons Discontents and Fears of trouble Griefs and Sorrows for loss of Friends Wife Children do often quench mens spirits and sink them into the Grave Nor is it to be denied but that many times they cause men to prefer death before life and to chuse strangling before breathing Job 7.15 But upon the sense of Sin when the Conscience feels the weight of it when God shoots his Arrows into a man and haeret lateri lethalis Arundo the deadly Arrow sticks in his side then the Venome thereof drinks up his spirit is as the stinging of a Scorpion or fiery flying Serpent it tortures like Hell and is more bitter and terrible then Death it self The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity saith Solomon Prov. 18.14 but a wounded spirit who can bear In other Afflictions there is some Remedy from Reason or Faith if not to comfort yet to quiet the Soul but in the sense of Sin committed till Pardon thereof be apprehended no Argument can be fastned but will be rejected Men in these Wounds of Conscience doe like persons in extreme Anguish who tear off their Plaisters that should ease or cure them so do wounded Consciences reject all Allegations of Scripture brought to allay their Anguish as if they belong'd not to them as Spira and others have done And that which is the Sting of Sin that most of all makes it deadly poisonous is the apprehension of God as angry as an Enemy unappeasable till it be acknowledged to be what it is an evil and bitter thing that we have sinned against the Lord and that his fear is not in us as the Prophet speaks Jer. 2.19 Which leads me to the II. OBSERVATION That a Penitent Sinner doth not mince or lessen his Sin but sets it out or confesseth it to God in its greatest Aggravations in variety of odious Appellations when he betakes himself to God for Redress So David besides the variety of terms he here paints out the Deformity of his Sins by adds also vers 3 4. I acknowledge my Transgressions and my Sin is ever before me Against thee thee onely have I sinned and done this Evil in thy sight
forgiven So indeed it falls out sometimes that mens Transgressions when they have sinned presumptuously against Conviction of Conscience within and Warnings without do so stare in their faces that they affright them with terrour and astonishment their Spirits are wounded they apprehend the Devil haling them to the infernall Prison expect nothing but Hell and Damnation cry out of God as Cruel of themselves as Damned wretches Such a View of Sin as thus tends to Despair that eyes onely God's Justice and their own Desert that begets Hatred of God as a Tyrant no Address to him as a Gracious Prince is indeed very dangerous Humble Penitents do not so set their Iniquities before them This is the manner onely of despairing Saul's revolting Spira's such as have sinned wilfully with an high hand and continue in their Apostasie from the Truth that say There is no hope we have loved strangers and after them will we go Jer. 2.25 But returning Sinners remember their Sins and they are ever before them in another manner and to another purpose They present their Sins to themselves that they may shame themselves and give Glory to God in acknowledging his Righteousness without deniall of his Grace They look not onely on the foulness of their Trespasses and the greatness of their Debts but also on the riches of God's Grace the fulness of Christ's Obedience the inexhaustible fountain of Christ's Bloud the infallible Assurance of the New Covenant the ample Promises of the Gospel and accordingly with Confession of Sin they adjoyn Prayer for Pardon Faith in Christ's Bloud and plead God's declaration of his own Properties his former dealing with great Transgressours and in the same manner as David did here V. OBSERVATION The true Penitent tells God of setting his Iniquities before him to induce God to relenting Compassion towards him and gracious Condonation of him In the Penitentiall Psalm De profundis 130.2 3 4. the Penitent Sinner thus bespeaks God Let thine ears be attentive to the voice of my Supplication If thou Lord shouldst mark Iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is Forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared Even the wicked Ninevites had so much apprehension of the possibility of God's mercifull Clemency that after Jonas's Proclamation of their approaching Ruine they resolved to cry mightily to God upon this apprehension Who can tell if God will turn and repent and turn away from his fierce Anger that we perish not Jon. 3.9 'T is true they that worship the Devil and pray to him doe all out of Fear as looking for nothing but Cruelty from unclean Spirits But Jonas in his froward fit Chap. 4.2 acknowledgeth that the Lord is a gracious God and mercifull slow to Anger and of great Kindness and repenteth him of the Evil. Even by the experience of them that know not God this is found true which made even Infidels cry unto the Lord in their Distresses and confess their Sins in hope of Help The believing Penitent knows both by experience and from the Nature Works and Word of God that when he sets his Sins before him God casts them behind his back that God looks upon men and if any say I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profited me not He will deliver his Soul from the Pit and his Life shall see the Light Job 33.27 28. They have learned that he that hideth his Sins shall not prosper but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall have Mercy Prov. 28.13 That if we confess our Sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our Sins and the Bloud of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all Sin 1 Joh. 1.7 9. They judge that what David found they shall find I said I will confess my Transgressions to the Lord and thou forgavest the Iniquity of my Sin And therefore For this shall every one that is Godly pray unto thee in a time that thou maist be found Psal 32.5 6. And consequently it is their course as being best for them to set their Sins before them so as to humble them and to set them before God that he may pardon them APPLICATION And now I beseech you lay all that I have said to heart as of greatest concernment to each of you What David did what all the Saints have done in all Ages you should doe in this their Practice should be your Pattern It is necessary to be done though it be much against the spirits of men Most men are quick-sighted in viewing the Faults of others but blear-eyed when they are to look upon their own Crimes Censuring and Judging others is very frequent Self-judging is very rare They that would take a Mote out of their Brother's eye will not take notice of the Beam in their own Few are willing to have their Sins set before them by others and themselves are far from setting them before them of their own accord A free Reprover is accounted intolerable Men hate them that rebuke them Yea a Minister who by Office is bound to doe it though he doe it to save their and his own Soul yet he is not endured for it but declined and persecuted They that cannot deny their Sins yet put off the Faultiness of them to some other Cause They that acknowledge their Sins to have been from themselves yet excuse and extenuate them Scarce a man confesseth his Sins that are hidden from men if he do confess them to God it is but slightly What a Beast was I saith the Drunkard God forgive me saith the Swearer though the one wallows in his Intemperance day after day and the other profanes the Name of God every hour Thus Sin is slightly acknowledged by the Sinner without any sense of the Iniquity of his Nature or the Love he hath to his Sin which are the Causes of it without any Compunction of heart without Remorse of Soul without Bemoaning it to God in Supplications bewailing his Folly his Naughtiness and earnestly humbly begging Pardon Yea when God sets mens Sins by his Judgments on them in order before them they will not set them before themselves to give him the Glory of his Justice when his Hand is lifted up they will not see when he makes their Hearts ake their Eyes weep by his Strokes for their Sins they fret with Anger but weep not out of Sorrow for Sin No marvel that men find not the Comfort of God's pardoning Grace when they slubber over this great Business which the Godly have always found to be the right and onely way to Mercy in so dull and negligent a manner as if they could deal with God as with an Idol that hath neither eyes to see their Impenitency nor hands to punish their Sins and so carry themselves as if they could mock God with a few words of course without any serious or hearty Sorrow for their Disobedience to God's Law and Provocation of his terrible Majesty Oh that you would in time repent throughly of
their words and misusing their persons which stirred up the Wrath of God against his people so as there was no Remedy 2 Chron. 36.16 These were the Sins that Daniel meant in his Supplication which either symbolized or was contemporary with this Dan. 9.5 6. Now God is said to remember Sins when he doth actually punish persons for them and this is deprecated here simple Forgetfulness being a thing impossible to befall God who is uncapable of any defect but hath all things past present and to come in his view throughout all Eternity 2. Here is a Petition for Help Let thy tender Mercies speedily prevent us Wherein the thing desired is the coming of Aid for their Deliverance from their Captivity and the restoring of their City and Temple and that to be hastened the time seeming long to them in which they were oppressed by the Babylonian Kings and kept from the Land of their desires And this is begged as a product of God's tender Mercies or Bowels of Mercies by which Expression such Mercy as is wont to be in Mothers towards the Children of their womb whose Bowells earn towards them is attributed to God Though to speak exactly as the Schoolmen say Mercy is not in God secundùm Affectum he hath not any formal Dolour or Sympathy so as to be grieved with our Evills as we are when we pity others but secundùm Effectum in respect of the Effect because God in our Misery doth as we doe when we have Compassion on others afford Succour and Relief to those whom he is said to be mercifull to 3. The Petition is enforced with the mention of their low Condition For we are brought very low impoverished or made thin that is we are poor in Purse thin of People much diminished every way spoiled debarred of our Liberty of our Religion of our Peace burthened with imperious Commands heavy Yokes of the Lordly Tyrants of Babylon persecuted with a fiery Furnace for not adoring their Idol in danger of casting into a Den of Lions for calling upon the Name of our God destined to a Panolethry or a total Slaughter by wicked Courtiers proud Haman and his Complices and have none to help us but our God and therefore we pray Let thy tender Mercies speedily prevent us or as in the Verse next my Text Help us O God of our Salvation for the Glory of thy Name and deliver us and purge away our Sins for thy Name 's sake From whence though the occasion of the present business be somewhat different we may deduce these Observations usefull for this Day 's work 1. That it is God's Remembring of Sins which is the reason of the Calamities that befall a people 2. That the Removing of them is an effect of his tender Mercies 3. That God's Time of Help is the low Condition of Supplicants 4. That Bewailing of Sins and humble Supplication for Mercy are the proper and effectual Remedies against the Calamities which are incumbent on God's people Of these in their order I. OBSERVATION That it is God's Remembrance of Sins which is the reason of the Calamities that befall a people It is the Maxim of the Apostle Rom. 6.23 That the Wages or Stipend of Sin is Death Death and all the Evils tending to it were at first the adjudged Pay for Sin against God and Sin is still the Egge out of which all the venomous brood of Mischiefs incident to mankind are hatched By one man Sin entred into the world and Death by Sin and so Death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Rom. 5.12 Adam opened the Floud-gate whereby a Deluge of all sorts of Miseries hath drowned the world But though his Sin were the Fountain of all Calamities yet as Rivers swell by much Rain and overflowing cause particular Inundations of some places so it is with Man by reason of Sin besides the First man's Transgression there is such an increase of Sin in his Posterity that it provokes God sometimes to inflict such remarkable Plagues and Vengeance as are different from the common Death of all men The Uncleanness and Cruelty of the Old world in Noah's days brought the universal Floud on the world of the Vngodly The excessive Pride Filthiness Riot Bestiality of the Sodomites brought down on them from Heaven Fire and Brimstone to consume them The Oppressing of Israel with the Hardness of Pharaoh's Heart caused the drowning of him and his Army in the Red sea Yea the remarkable Sins of those who have been owned as God's own People have caused particular Judgments Achan's Sin made Israel fly before the Canaanites Saul's Sin caused three years Famine Hophni and Phineas by their profaning the Offering of the Lord brought on Eli's House the Loss of his Sons the Loss of the Ark and the Deprivation of his Posterity from the Priesthood Yea David's Sin in numbring of the people moved God to send a Plague on Israel which swept away seventy thousand men But when Manasseh had filled Jerusalem with Witchcraft Idolatry Cruelty and added an obdurate Heart against God's Messengers the Desolation by Nebuchadnezzar seized on them in a far greater measure But worst of all when the Jews killed the Lord Jesus and their own Prophets and persecuted the Apostles of Christ not pleasing God and being contrary to all men forbidding the Apostles to speak to the Gentiles that they might be saved to fill up their Sins always then Wrath came upon them to the uttermost as S. Paul speaks 1 Thess 2.15 16. Yea were there no words of Holy Scripture to inform us whence wasting Wars Inundations of water great Famines consuming Pestilence and other effects of Divine Vengeance come on a Nation yet the Histories of such people as knew not God the Observations of considerate men the extorted or free Confession of notorious Sinners in all Ages were abundant evidence to inferrre that it is God's Remembrance of Sin that is the Source of Calamities it being usual for all sorts of Sinners to accuse themselves their own Consciences bearing witness against them when Evils are upon them Adonibezek could remember his Cruelty when the Lex talionis took hold on him Judg. 1.7 And Joseph's Brethren could then acknowledge that God had found out their Iniquity when they were in Distress themselves Gen. 42.21 and 44.16 Any remarkable Affliction that is not ordinary and common wrings out from guilty Consciences such expressions as that of the Widow of Sarepta 1 King 17.18 O thou man of God art thou come to call my Sin to Remembrance and to slay my Son Consonant hereto are God's Declarations of himself Isa 59.1 2. Behold the Lord's Hand is not shortned that it cannot save neither is his Ear heavy that it cannot hear But your Iniquities have separated between you and your God and your Sins have hid his Face from you Perditio tua ex te Israel O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self Hos 13.9 Your Iniquities have turned away these things and your
and have rebelled thou hast not pardoned Thus did David when God sent a Plague on Israel and swept away 700000 1 Chron. 21.16 17. He and the Elders of Israel cloathed in Sackcloath fell on their faces confessed the Sin which was the Cause of it prayed God to remove the Pestilence and he was intreated of them When there was a Plague upon Israel for their Murmuring Aaron took Incense and made an Atonement for the people and he stood between the living and the dead and the Plague was stayed Num. 16.47 48. At another time when the Israelites provoked God to Anger with their Inventions and the Plague brake in upon them Phineas stood up and executed Judgment or prayed and the Plague was stayed Psal 106.29 30. This Antidote hath in all Ages been found a Preservative against the Plague and the most effectual Medicine to cure it Physicians prescribe many good Receipts and Magistrates doe well to use all the best means they can to hinder the spreading of Infection and justly are those destroyed as Pests of Mankind who willingly infect the sound or carelesly permit those things which may poison others They that are unmercifull to the Sick suffering or causing them to perish by their negligence and ill usage are justly censured as Promoters of the Contagion But the truly Penitent who confesseth and forsaketh his Sins the importunate believing Petitioner at the Throne of Grace the zealous and impartiall Magistrate who executeth Judgment against those venomous Sins that provoke God to shoot his deadly Arrows against us are the best and most prevalent Instruments to cure the Plague and to restore Health in our dwellings On the other side the unchast intemperate unrighteous covetous Worldlings the Atheistical proud profane the deceitful Hypocrites that are impenitent that confess not their Sins nor forsake their evil ways those that hang down their heads for a day forbear a Meal or two and perhaps come to hear but are not affected with God's Hand nor sensible of the Evil of their ways that reform not their ungodly and unrighteous Life that use other means to preserve them but seek not to God in good earnest for Pardon of Sins that appear here for company but do not execute Justice nor shew Mercy to others These are so far from being instrumentall to removing the Plague that they rather cause the continuance and the increase of it it being God's course not to turn away his Anger but to stretch out his Hand still in punishing when people turn not to him that smiteth them nor seek the Lord of hoasts Isa 9.12 13. APPLICATION And now to apply what hath been said to the present work What the Preachers of God's Word have often foretold us that for the Sins of this Land and especially of the people of our great City we had reason to expect some great Scourge the same is now come upon us The destroying Angel hath drawn his Sword hath killed thousands already the Plague is not onely begun but hath wasted some part of that City great Terrour is upon us many fly thence and perhaps die by the way or live to infect other places Houses are emptied Streets untroden Markets without Sellers and Buiers a heavy dolefull Disease is come upon us Who is so hard-hearted so Atheisticall as not to see the Hand of God in all this The Preachers from the Pulpit foretold it Any who was acquainted with the Holy Scripture with the way of God's Judgments in our own or former times might see that our excess of profane Swearing Contempt of Religion and the Word of God our unmeasurable Pride Vanity Luxury in Meat Drink Apparel sensuall Pleasures our Contentions our Oppressions our Hatred Divisions Unmercifulness and all sorts of Vices continually shewing themselves openly among us would be the Seed out of which this or the like Calamity would at length be produced And yet where is the person that laies this to heart as an effect of Divine Vengeance and the Fruit of his Sin Who is there that searcheth and trieth his waies that is sensible of the Plague of his own Heart that with repenting Ephraim smites upon his thigh that repents him of his Wickedness saying What have I done Who is there that either fears God the more or prays the more or amends his waies the more Are not our Pride Fulness of bread Wantonness Unmercifulness yea which is worse our Cursing Swearing Lying Rage Blasphemy Lewdness as much as before Do we not to use the Prophet's phrase every one turn yet to our course as the Horse rusheth into the battel Have not we yet such an unsanctified unhumbled spirit as to deride Preachers Monitions to slight God's Judgments to harden one another in Sin and so to disappoint God's Design in this Visitation which should awaken us from our Security humble us under his mighty Hand bring us on our knees in earnest Supplications teach us to fear Sin learn us to doe well lest a worse thing happen to us If it be so with us what can be expected but that our seeming Humiliation Fasting and Prayer this day should become Sin to us and be so far from averting the present Evil as that it will provoke the Divine Vengeance to punish us yet seven times more for our Sins For sure when one Judgment doth not cause us to return to God he will send another The more Warnings God gives us if the fire of God's Wrath be not quenched by our Repentance and Supplications it will burn the more fiercely It is in vain for us to imagine that by any other means we can prevent our Danger this is the onely safe course for our Preservation And therefore let us be perswaded this day to draw nigh to God that he may draw nigh to us 1. We must begin with a through Search into our own waies finding out and confessing to God with serious Compunction of Heart and Remorse of Conscience not onely our open but also our secret Sins Know that the revenging Eye of God cannot be deceived with Shews that he knows the secretest Motions of our Hearts the most hidden Practices of our Lives Know that it is in vain to strive with him that it is Madness to provoke him to Jealousy unless we were stronger then he is And therefore it is no better then Folly and Madness to be superficiall in this business of Searching Confessing Repenting of our Sins We say Non est tutum ludere cum Sacris We must not trifle in things of God we must not sport with God Neither must we onely be sensible of our own personall Sins but of the Sins of others our Governours our Neighbours our Forefathers Sins David's Sin may bring a Plague on the People We are to mourn and be humbled for them especially which goe unpunished which cause the Land to mourn 2. We must goe on to cry mightily to God as the Ninevites did The Pardoning of great Sins the removing of great
which a Bee would convert to the sweetest Hony In the end this course is most pernicious to him that follows it there being nothing that more alienates Affection from a person then his abuse of Kindness God's Love abused turns to Rage and none have God more incensed against them then those that having tasted of the good Gift of God fall away into sinfull Courses that are so unthankfull for so great a Favour as the offer of Reconciliation the Sacrifice of Christ the Invitation to his Supper to the Marriage of the Son of God as that they chuse rather to be at home with their Oxen and Wives and Farms or to come without a Wedding-garment then to accept of his Motion and accommodate themselves to his Kindness that having had ten thousand Talents forgiven them take their Brother by the throat for an hundred pence When men despise the Riches of God's Goodness and Forbearance and Long-suffering not knowing that the Goodness of God leadeth them to Repentance after their hardness and impenitent Hearts they treasure up to themselves Wrath against the day of Wrath and revelation of the righteous Judgment of God Rom. 2.4 5. APPLICATION Oh then let me in the most tender Bowells of Compassion my Heart can be touched with with the most serious Importunity that my words can express with the deepest Adjuration by the most affecting things that I can mind you of instantly press you to take heed of this most vile ugly dishonest irrational and damnable Abuse of the Divine Grace so as to continue in Sin that Grace may abound It is most meet yea natural that Love should beget Love Grace should beget Observance Is not he a most egregious Villain that hates his own Father that begat him that kills him that gave him Life Is not the Lord the Rock who begat thee the God that formed thee And wilt thou then be so unnatural as to hate God as thou dost if this be thy Requital for his Grace to persevere in Wickedness He tells thee that he is hated when thou lovest any thing more then him givest his Glory to another makest thy Belly thy God gloriest in thy Shame mindest earthly things And wilt thou thus recompense so great Goodness with such extreme Badness He saith he will not hold him guiltless that taketh his Name in vain And wilt thou pollute the Holy Name of thy Holy Father with thy impure Swearing The earnal mind is Enmity against God as being not subject to his Law but inconsistent with it And wilt thou suffer vain Thoughts to lodge in thee fleshly Reason to sway with thee carnal Lusts to rule over thee All Benefits received engage to answerable Duty What art thou then but a very Miscreant that having so much taste how gracious God is how amply he hath vouchsafed to be bountifull to thee in giving Christ for thee how profusely he hath bestowed on thee the Riches of Heaven in the largess of Spiritual Blessings in heavenly things in Christ dost yet side with Sin and Satan his profest irreconcilable Enemies that canst harbour that Enemy which thy Allegeance to God binds thee to pursue zealously unto death Oh that rather the Sense of God's Goodness might make us good the Taste of his Grace might make us gracious Surely none are worse Enemies to God then such as have been acquainted with the excess of God's Grace in Christ yet exceed in their obstinate perseverance in Evil such as when God's Grace should draw Tears from their Eyes Sighs from their Breasts cause Dejectedness in their Spirits by reason of their Sinning against so incomprehensible a Love as that which he vouchsafes to the Sons of Adam in Christ have yet a Forehead of brass that cannot blush glory in their Wickedness boast of their Lewdness and are secure in their Impenitency Greater Woe was to Chorazin and Bethsaida then to Tyre and Sidon because they repented not upon such Proofs of Christ's Excellency as would have wrought on the other As they had been lifted up to Heaven so Christ foretells their casting down to Hell No people in the world are likely to have a greater degree of Torment in Hell then profane and unrighteous men among us who have the greatest Proof of God's Grace of any people on the Earth As then you either stand in fear of so great Damnation or are desirous of that abundant Grace which the Gospel of Christ exhibits abhorr the thought of Continuing in Sin that Grace may abound Let the Mercies of God lead you to present your Bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable Service for that will procure his Favour here and your Blessedness hereafter Which he grant c. Amen LAVS DEO THE DIVINE COMPASSIONS The Fourteenth SERMON LAMENT iij. 22. It is of the Lord's Mercies that we are not consumed because his Compassions fail not I Have read to you a passage out of a most dolefull Poem composed by that Holy Prophet Jeremiah with much Art in the four first Chapters the order of the Hebrew Alphabet being observed in the initiall Letters of the Verses yet with a very deep sense of God's Judgments on Judah and Jernsalem and a tender Sympathy with them in their Affliction He had long and often foretold those Evils would befall them which he now saw come upon them quorum pars magna fuit and in which he had a great Share and he might well say Quis talia fando temperet à lacrymis Who could think or speak of such things with dry Eyes or an insensible Spirit This set may I say his Muse I should say rather his Prophetick spirit on work to endite and leave to the Church this Poem In which with much Compassion towards his Country he bewails their Desolation yet with much Piety towards God justifies him as punishing them according to the Demerit of their Sins and magnifies his Goodness as punishing them less then they deserved Both which are expressed in the words of my Text It is of the Lord's Mercies that we are not consumed because his Compassions fail not And sure we may say the like It is of the Lord's Mercies that London and all England are not consumed by the Pestilence because his Compassions fail not And therefore the handling of this Passage will be apposite to the present Face of things with us and the Occasion of this Day In it 1. The Prophet takes notice of the Mitigation of God's Wrath in that they were not consumed 2. He assigns the genuine Cause of it the Lord's Mercies or Benignities great Mercies which is exclusive of any other procuring Cause that might deserve it and intimates that there was sufficient reason did not his Mercies interpose why he should have consumed them 3. These Mercies are described 1. By the kind of them they were Compassions in the Original Bowel-mercies such as a tender Mother hath to the Child of her womb in God Pardoning Mercies Relieving
Love they feed heartily and are merry without any Check in themselves or fear of After-repentance It is so with them that feast in Heaven that are called to the Supper of the Lamb that eat and drink in his Kingdom that partake of that Feast full of fat things a Feast of wine on the lees of fat things full of marrow of wine on the lees well refined Isa 25.6 that partake of the Delicacies of Heaven of the Riches and costly Entertainment there they know they are heartily welcome to Heaven that they are not invited as Esther invited Haman to her Banquet to betray him but that they are in God's Presence out of the purest Love out of the most sincere Motive their Faithfulness to him their Sufferings for him and to the most desirable End the mutual Solace and Content of each in other God hath not any intent to make a farther Triall of them as of Adam in Paradise but to put an end to their Sufferings and hard Service that they may keep an everlasting Sabbath with him in Glory I have shewed you in some Adumbration those things which Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither hath it entred into the Heart of man to conceive even the things God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 Whereby I have given you a little Taste of those Joys the Fulness of which in God's Presence I should now insist on which was my II. PROPOSITION That there is a Fulness in these Joys This might be demonstrated by the Kinds of them they being not onely bodily but Spiritual not mixt but pure not in a less but a most intense degree not for a short time but for ever But this may perhaps be declared more fully in the handling of the III. OBSERVATION That at God's right hand there are Pleasures for evermore III. PROPOSITION That these Joys in God's Presence in their Plenitude or Fulness as they belong to Christ so also to all true Believers This is deducible from our Lord Christ 's words Joh. 16.20 21 22. Verily verily I say unto you that ye shall weep and lament but the World shall rejoyce and ye shall be sorrowfull but your Sorrow shall be turned into Joy A woman when she is in travail hath Sorrow because her hour is come but as soon as she is delivered of the Child she remembreth no more the Anguish for joy that a man is born into the world And ye now therefore have Sorrow but I will see you again and your Heart shall rejoyce and your Joy no man taketh from you Whereupon the Apostle saith 1 Joh. 3.2 Beloved now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is The same condition of Joy and Glory though in an inferiour degree shall be to the adopted Sons of God as is to the onely-begotten Son of God and it is God's righteous Judgment that they which sow in Tears should reap in Joy Psal 126.5 IV. PROPOSITION That the Assurance of these Joys set before Christ was the grand Support and Encouragement of him in his Obedience active and passive and is so still to all the Holy Saints who doe and suffer according to the Will of God As concerning Christ it is expresly delivered Heb. 12.2 that for the Joy set before him he endured the Cross despising the Shame And that it is so to all the Servants of Christ is frequently told us Rom. 5.1 2 3. Being justified by Faith we have Peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ By whom we have access by Faith into this Grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the Glory of God And not onely so but we glory in Tribulation also 2 Cor. 4.16 17 18. For which cause we faint not but though our Outward man perish yet the Inward man is renewed day by day For our light Affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory While we look not at the things that are seen but the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are Temporal but the things which are not seen are Eternal APPLICATION I do but cursorily pass over these Points that I may make some Application to your use and that shall be 1. To refute the Censures of Carnal men who count the Course of the Righteous to be Madness and his End without Honour and therefore have him in Derision and as a Proverb of Reproach as it was observed long agoe in the Book of Wisedom Chap. 5.3 4. They can discern no Joys in the humble penitent Believers either at present or for the future They are no whit acquainted with the Joy of the Holy Ghost nor the Comforts of Christ nor the Fulness of Joy that is in the Presence of God and for this cause imagine the mortified Christian to be but a melancholick man that foolishly pines away himself not injoying that Mirth and that Benefit of such things as are allowed to the sons of men And therefore if they find a person to be of a wounded Spirit of a troubled Conscience if through Weakness a person of a tender Conscience be pensive afflicted with the sense of Sin and perplexed in Spirit they impute it to Religion to hearing of Sermons and performing other holy Duties while they themselves think there is nothing better then to be merry while they may to eat and drink for to morrow they shall die Come on say they let us enjoy the good things that are present and let us speedily use the Creatures like as in youth Let us fill our selves with costly Wine and Ointments and let no Flower of the Spring pass by us Let us crown our selves with Rose-buds before they be withered Let none of us goe without his part of our Jollity let us leave tokens of our Joyfulness in every place for this is our Portion and our Lot is this Wised 2.6 7 8 9. Come ye say they I will fetch Wine and we will fill our selves with strong Drink and to morrow shall be as this day and much more abundant Isa 56.12 But sure sober Infidels have taken such Speeches to be rather the Speeches of Brutes then of Men. Who can conceive that Man that hath an immortal Spirit breathed into him from the Father of Spirits should have no higher Joys then sensual Delights that he should be satisfied with such Contents as are onely from Sublunary things If the Philosophers knew that Vertue of it self could give such Tranquillity of mind such ample Content as that they could discern the Joys of Sensualists to be but the Foolery of besotted men Christians may discern that the Joys of Philosophers in their dim Light of Reason and Morall honesty together with their glorying in their Idols could be but as Moon-light compared to the Sun and their Joys
is the grand Expectation of the Saints That God will not fail to lead them in his Paths for his Name 's sake and so to order their Steps in his Word that no Iniquity get dominion over them that the Spirit of God will so quicken them as they may run the way of his Commandments that he will enable them to live by Faith in Christ and thereby preserve them to his heavenly Kingdom It is that exceeding and enduring weight of Glory which is wrought by Afflictions and the Guidance of Divine Teachings and Providences that causeth them to look not at the things which may be seen which are but temporall but the things which are unseen and eternall 2 Cor. 4.17 18. For which reason the same Apostle tells the Thessalonians 2 Thess 2.13 14. We are bound to give thanks always to God for you because God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth Whereunto he called you by our Gospell to the obtaining of the Glory of our Lord Jesus Christ APPLICATION For Application hereof If the Apostle had cause to be thankfull for the Thessalonians because of God's calling them to the obtaining of the Glory of our Lord Christ much more hath each believing Christian cause to be thankfull to God to rejoyce and take Comfort in this so blessed a Condition of God's Guidance by his Counsell so as to bring him to Glory And since the leaving a man to his own Counsell is the Forerunner of Perdition how ought he to dread as a direfull Omen of the most execrable Condition the being given over to follow his own Counsell to be carried away by his own Lusts as being a certain sign of God's Desertion and exposing of him as a Prey to the Devill Wherefore it highly concerns every one who desires his own Salvation to follow that Admonition Psal 2.11 to serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with trembling or as it is Phil. 2.12 to work out his Salvation with fear and trembling When we consider our own Ignorance in the Way which leads to eternall Life our Folly and Unskilfulness in finding it out our Negligence in inquiring after it our Inadvertency to that Teaching and direction which might guide us in it when we ponder the vanity of humane Reason our Frailty and Easiness in hearkening to Deceivers the incessant Diligence and Vigilancy of the old Serpent in perverting us the impossibility of our attaining to Salvation by our own Wisedom and Strength and the extreme perill of Erring so as to perish eternally if we have not God's Guidance we shall see great cause to fear our selves find great reason to seek the Guidance of God's Counsell and to walk always by it to follow that Light which he hath held forth before us in his Word of Truth especially by his Son the Light of the world the Way the Truth and the Life by whom alone we can goe to the Father without whom we walk in darkness and know not whither we goe Without this Guidance we can doe nothing as we ought but as men driven by our Lusts or seduced by Satan we are hurried violently or tamely drawn into those By-paths which lead down to the Chambers of eternall Death Alas our Temptations which are many and with so much Wiliness laid to insnare us our Insufficiency to think any thing of our selves as of our selves the sad Experience we have of the Falls of many most precious Saints the frequent Complaints of the most mortified Christians who bemoan their Wretchedness by reason of that Body of Death which still depresseth them our Childishness in affecting what is most pleasing to Sense and our little apprehension of our own Necessities our undervaluing of spirituall Blessings in heavenly things in Christ the Prevalency of the Carnall mind in us which is too often as the Biass that turns us that inclines our Free will to Earthly things but is Enmity against God being not subject to God's Law neither indeed can it be All these things I say should make us suspect our selves and examine our Thoughts and Ways whether they be according to God's Counsell or not they should make us consider what Spirit we are of even in our Religious Duties how we are acted not onely in Secular affairs but also in our exercise of Godliness even in our Prayers and most zealous Service of God Solomon's Counsell is very necessary to be followed Prov. 3.5 6. Trust in the Lord with all thine heart and lean not to thine own Vnderstanding In all thy ways acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths This is the great Stay and Comfort of a self-knowing Christian that observes himself his own Weakness but yet is possessed with the taste of God's Grace That though he be weak and foolish yet he is guided by God's Spirit that he orders the Motions of his life by the Rule of Christ and still seeks to Heaven for Light from thence to lead him that God will guide him with his Counsell and then bring him to his Glory Amen LAVS DEO A BELIEVER'S SAFETY PEACE REST. The Twenty-fourth SERMON PSAL. xl 8. I will both lay me down in peace and sleep for thou Lord onely makest me dwell in Safety WHAT was the Occasion of composing this Psalm is uncertain Whether it were after or before his Entrance into his Kingdom before or after his Victory over Absalom sure it is it was made by David when he was in an holy frame of Spirit And in it he first bespeaks God as a Supplicant v. 1. then expostulates with his insolent Adversaries for their Malignity towards him vers 2. declares his Assurance of Divine Election and Tuition vers 3. admonishes them how to rectifie themselves vers 4 5. mentions the Study of the generality of men with his Request for himself vers 6. acknowledges the meliority of his Choice vers 7. and thereupon infers this Resolution which I have read I will both lay me down in peace and sleep c. There is no difficulty about the Reading or Meaning of the words whether we reade together in id ipsum as the Vulgar Latin or both as our Translation whether we reade Thou Lord onely referring to his single Help or Thou Lord makest me alone though I have no other with me dwell in Safety Hope Confidence or Security This Passage shews his settled Acquiescence in the Tuition of the Almighty grounded upon his experience and knowledge of his Love and Favour without any such anxious Thoughtfulness enfeebling Fears distracting Perplexities as others in the like Distresses and Destitutions to those he was in were wont to be oppressed with It is likely David when he speaks of his laying himself down in peace and sleeping meant it onely of his natural Sleep and his addressing himself thereto To which sense those words lead us Psal 3.5 where he saith I laid me down and slept I awaked for the Lord sustained
shall enquire 1. What is this Walking in a man's Vprightness 2. How this demonstrates the Fear of the Lord 3. What Advantage accrues to a man that walketh in his Uprightness and feareth the Lord. Of these in their order I. What it is for a man to walk in his Vprightness Walking in the primitive acception thereof imports a natural progressive Motion of the Body and Vprightness is that Position of the Body according to which it is so placed as not to incline to one hand more then the other but to be even set between both But in the Metaphorical sense in which hundreds of times this Expression is used in Holy Scripture it signifies the moral Motion of the Mind and Members of a Man as he is a rational Being to be regulated by the Law of his Maker And so it supposeth the Actings of the Understanding Will Affections and Members of a man in an orderly and constant Course out of a vital spiritual Principle in him by a certain Rule from one term of his Motion to another for the attaining of his End Whence it is evident that as to Bodily Walking there are many things requisite or presupposed so to the Spiritual Walking of the Soul or Man in his Uprightness there belong sundry things either as presupposed or required without which he cannot be said to walk in his Uprightness As it is with our Body while we live on Earth there will still be some Motion Man is born to Labour as the Sparks fly upward God hath given to the sons of men sore Travail to be exercised therewith so it is also with the Soul there are stirrings of Thoughts Desires which cause elicit Acts of the Will in its Purposes and imperate Acts in setting the Members of the Body on work for avoiding Evil or obtaining some supposed Good And as corporal Motion is not in an instant but requires Time more or less so for the contriving and prosecuting such Designs as the Will pitches upon the whole Life of man is imployed Likewise as there is in Walking some Place or Person from which or from whom the Motion begins and to which or whom it tends which are called in Philosophy the Terminus à quo the bound from whence and the Terminus ad quem the bound to which it is directed so are there in the moral Actions of the Soul and Members some like Bounds persons are either turned from God after Satan or they are turned from the power of Satan unto God they either move from or to Heaven or Hell Life or Death And as there is a Way in all Walking of the Body in which the Motion is performed Motus est super immobile there must be some fixt and settled thing which men ordinarily walk upon they do not move as Fishes in the Sea or Birds in the Air whose Way hath no fixed Path so it is in mens Walking spiritually there is a broad Way which leadeth to Destruction or a narrow Way which leadeth to Life a Way of Satan's or a Way of God's in which every man walks And as there is in man's Walking a vital locomotive Principle which is well or ill ordered according to the Sight and the state of the Members and such Guidance as is from others Direction so that sometimes for want of Sight or Light a person stumbles and falls or by reason of Mistakes from himself or Mis-direction of other persons he errs and never attains to that which he moves towards sometimes he prospers in his Motion seeing his Way aright heeding it not fainting but holding on to the end of his Journey So it is in mens Spiritual Walking there is a wrong and a right Principle which moves their Mind and Will they walk after the Flesh or after the Spirit their Way is either Satan's or God's his Dictates or God's Precepts they walk in Darkness or in the Light either they are weary of well-doing and goe back to Perdition and turn aside to crooked Ways or else they discern the Errour of their ways chuse the Way of Life goe on with Alacrity and liveliness therein and persevere to the end Also as in Bodily Walking the Motion is not per Saltum one Step or Leap doth not begin and end it but it is progressive there is Step after Step one slower another quicker one part of the Way is sooner and with less trouble and danger passed over then the other So it is in the Spiritual Walking the Actings of the Mind and Will are not performed all together neither the immanent nor transient Acts of a man whether right or wrong are done at once but some one hour some another with various Success with diversity of Ability and Speed and Event by reason of the Assistence or Hindrance of concurrent Accidents or Causes which do frequently alter both the Motion and the Consequence of it such as are the Temptations of Satan or the Influence of God's Spirit the Society of evil Company or the Converse with Godly persons corrupt Teachers or holy Pastours outward estate of Prosperity or Adversity with many other things which occasion mens Progress to be more or less expedite either to the better or the worse Thus I have somewhat opened to you what this Walking is in general It is now farther necessary that I shew you more specially what is this Walking of a man in his Uprightness which shews he fears the Lord. 1. For a man who feareth the Lord to walk in his Uprightness it is necessary that he set his face towards God that is that he propound God's Glory and the obtaining of his Favour as his End In all such Actions as are rational it is the End propounded by the Doer which hath a chief sway in the denominating of them good Finis dat Mediis Amabilitatem Many brave Exploits done by heroical men onely to immortalize their Names to spread their Fame though they were advantageous to the people of their Generation yet being not acted out of Dutifulness to God as the impulsive to exalt God as the final Cause they were but splendida Peccata glistering Sins like Gloe-worms or Wood that seems to shine in the dark but is nothing else but rotten matter or mere Dirt. He that walks uprightly stoops not down to the Earth nor pores on his own Cloaths but looks upwards to something higher then himself towards Heaven Pharisees Alms Fasting Prayers though much esteemed by themselves and other men were not regarded by God as being done for themselves not for God But such Actions as are done without Ostentation with an eye to God's Approbation though in secret and of no account with men yet are they in the sight of God of great price as S. Peter saith 1 Pet. 3.4 of the hidden man of the Heart in that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meek and quiet Spirit The Rectitude of the Heart is most conducible to a man's upright walking which emboldned Hezekiah thus to