Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n woe_n word_n work_v 18 3 6.1112 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A86934 A brief exposition of the prophecies of Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. By George Hutcheson minister at Edenburgh. Imprimatur, Edm. Calamy Hutcheson, George, 1615-1674. 1654 (1654) Wing H3822; Thomason E1454_1; ESTC R209588 282,367 353

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

endue them with excellent qualifications and give them safety v. 11 12 13. and would furnish them with ample matter of joy v. 14 15. and of serving God without fear v. 16. considering his power and love v. 17. and what he will do for recovering their broken and desperate estate v. 18.19 20. Vers 1. WO to her that is filthy and polluted to the oppressing City 2. She obeyed not the voice she received not correction she trusted not in the LORD she drew not neare to her God The Lord having by his Prophet used all the former meanes for reclaiming his people but in vain he comes now to pronounce his last sentence against the body of that nation and threatens Jerusalem with a wo the general causes whereof were her pollution through oppression and violence and her contempt of warnings from the Word her not being bettered by corrections her not trusting in God but in other things and her not entertaining communion with him who offered himself to her in the Covenant Doct. 1. As Gods anger declared against a people portends misery enough to them though there were no other evidences of it so he will not spare nor exempt his own people when they provoke him especially such as being most obliged to him yet do prove eminent in defection therefore as he threatens other Nations so also his own sinful people and names Jerusalem for all because she was chiefe in the defection who should have been holy and a Sanctuary to God and under this wo comprehends all the evils which afterward pursued that people 2. Injustice and oppression is an abominable and filthy sin especially in the Church and the riches gathered that way do not give any splendor but make men and places vile in Gods sight and obnoxious to his curse for the oppressing City is filthy and polluted as the crop or gorge of a ravenous bird where all unclean things are heaped together or as one made a publick spectacle of infamie as the word imports and therefore wo to her 3. As disobedience unto the Lord revealing his mind by his word is ground sufficient for a quarrel and as contempt of the authority of God in his word is the cause of mens boldnesse in sinne so it will be a great aggravation against sinners that warnings from the Word do not reclaim them for Wo to her that is filthy she obeyed not the voice 4. As rods sent upon the Church will either make her better by instructing and humbling her under Gods hand or ripen her yet more for Gods wo so obstinacy in sinne under corrections is a sad aggravation thereof for Wo to her that is filthy she received not correction or instruction by her correction as the word imports 5. God is so willing to be the stay and confidence of his people that it is a quarrel when they will not lean all their weight on him and as want of faith in God drives men to sinful and wrong courses so this is a great iniquity before him for Wo to her that is filthy and polluted to the oppressing City she trusted not in the Lord and this also is the cause why the word or rod works so little 6. As the neglect of keeping communion with God turneth the heart loose to all sinful wayes and snares so the cause of little dependance on God in straits is because men cannot be at paines to keep neer God that so they may reap the fruit of faith for Wo to her that is filthy she drew not neer to God and she trusted not in the Lord because she could not rake paines to draw neere to God 7. The Lords gracious condescendence and offering of himself to the visible Church to be approached unto in all cases and her profession of having an interest in him doth aggravate her sault in not making use of him nor taking hold of such an advantage for it is an addition to her sin that she drew not neer to her God that is to God who was hers in offer and visible covenant and in whom she gloried as hers Ver. 3. Her Princes within her are roaring lions her Iudges are evening wolves they gnaw not the bones till the morrow The Lord denounceth this wo upon Jerusalem more especially for the sins of her State-Rulers her Princes and superiour Magistrates who ought to have been for the praise of well-doers a comfort and Protectors to the Subjects were a terrour cruel as lions and that not against enemies but Subjects in the midst of the City and her Judges or inferiour Magistrates were no better then they but as cruel and unsatiably greedy as hungry wolves who coming out in the evening having fasted all day do not only eat the flesh of their prey but so do gnaw the very bones as they leave nothing till the morrow See Prov. 28.15 Doct. 1. As a land doth not ordinarily degenerate but when Mag strates of all ranks are also corrupt so the sins of Rulers have an especial hand in drawing judgements on a land for when the city is filthy and polluted c. v. 1. then Princes and Judges are lions and wolves and because of this wo is denounced 2. It is a great iniquity and abuse of Gods Ordinance of Magistracy when the hearts of men in power are lifted up above their brethren and when they employ all their power for their own ends and against those for whose good they should employ it this was the sin of Princes and Judges They are roaring lions within her and evening wolves 3. It is a judgement and a presage of ruine to come on a land wheu their Rulers are not men hating ●●vetousnesse but hungry greedy men are entrusted with affairs whereby they who in their private stations could not poorly bite and oppresse are enabled by their power and place to play the lion and wolfe such was Judahs case Her Judges were evening wolves they gnaw not the bones till the morrow or they leave not the bones to be gnawed or continue not to gnaw the bones till the morrow but presently devoure up all Ver. 4. Her Prophets are light and treacherous persons her Priests have polluted the Sanctuary they have done violence to the law The Lord subjoynes the sins of Church-officers as a further cause of this judgement and chargeth their false Prophets who pretended to an extraordinary calling with prophaneess and levity in their carriage and inconstancy in their doctrine fitting it to all humours and parties which was great perfidiousnesse and their Priests or ordinary Ministers with prophaning the Sanctuary and holy things in ministring unto the Lord and with perverting the true sense of the law in their ordinary doctrine and teaching of the people Doct. 1. When God reckons with a land for sin it is no strange thing to see them who should be meanes of reclaiming people that they may flee from the wrath to come accessory to the guilt of the land and partakers in
accountable to God for it and to examine how it is done whether well or not for so doth Gods challenge to give an account and to examine teach Dost thou wel c 2. To be excessively discontent at Providences especially for small matters is a thing no way beseeming the servants of God for this also is imported in the challenge that it was not right in him a Prophet to be angry yea exceedingly angry as the words may be read for the gourd 3. The pride of mans heart is such that it will justifie it selfe and stand it out even against the verdict of God if hee be given over to tentation for so doth Jonah's Answer to the Lords question teach I doe wel saith he to be angry or I am greatly angry even unto death Nothing will please him but death to bee by it rid of those troubles Ver. 10. Then said the LORD Thou hast had pity on the gourd for the which thou hast not laboured neither madest it grow which came up in a night and perished in a night 11. And should not I spare Nineveh that great city wherein are more then sixscore thousand persons that cannot discern between their right hand and their left hand and also much cattel The Lord doth now apply all that is past to his present purpose and from this discontent of Jonah le ts him see the absurdity of his former murmuring for if hee had given way to himselfe so passionately to commiserate so smal a thing as a gourd in producing whereof hee had no hand which was of so short continuance and which needed no pity and that onely because he received some profit and refreshment by it why did he so much stumble that the Lord spared Nineveh which was his handy work and every way considerable there being so many in it that eminently called for pity being neither sensible of any thing nor yet by grosse actual transgressions had provoked the Lord to denounce that judgement So that here the Lord is not approving Ionah's passion but by a reason drawn from the less to the more wherein Ionah a creature and the great Lord a stick and great Nineveh are compared Ionah is convinced of selfishnesse in approving himself in doing that unjustly which he condemned in God when done most mercifully and rightly Doct. 1. Self-love will easily blinde men so far as to make them approve themselves in doing of worse things then those they condemn in others for this is the scope of this reproof to shew Jonah that he would not allow the Lord on just causes to be merciful and yet could allow himself in his selfish passion 2. Much more latitude ought to be allowed to God in his way of working without our quarrelling then we may take to our selves for saith the Lord Thou who mayest be blinded with fancie and humour hadst pity and allowedst thy self in it and should not I a wise and sovereign Lord spare Nineveh being he to whom absolute submission of spirit is due though I thus reason thee out of thy folly 3. The Lord can easily take off the veile of fair pretexts from selfish men and let them be seen in their owne colours for whatever Ionah might pretend as the cause of his grief for Ninevehs sparing the Lord by this demonstrates that his bitterness flowed indeed from love to himself as might be seen in the matter of the Gourd 4. Men under tentation and in an ill way are not without much difficulty convinced that they are wrong therefore the Lord useth all these meanes that Jonah may take with the reproof when by lively demonstrations and deeds he should see his errour Thou hadst pity upon the Gourd c. And should not I spare Nineveh 5. The Lord is so constant in his good-will that he will not only shew mercy but wil maintain his so doing against all who will oppose it for here he pleads for his mercy to Nineveh against Jonah Should not I spare Nineveh 6. The Lord by his practice teacheth us to let out our affections upon objects according as they are of worth in themselves therefore albeit nothing can be of worth to him yet he reprehends Jonahs pity on the gourd a thing of so smal worth coming up in one night and perishing in another as far worse imployed then his mercy in sparing Nineveh that great City and therefore the more to be tendered by him 7. The Lords creating of men may give ground of hope to the sensible sinner that God delights not in his destruction but upon repentance will be willing to spare for while he reasons from Jonahs pity on the gourd for which he had not laboured neither made it grow he teacheth that he could not but spare repenting Nineveh it being his own handy-work 8. Not only persons come to maturity and turning to God but even their children yea and cattel who cannot sensibly acknowledg him do concur to plead for pity to the penitent at Gods hands and his mercy will look on their condition and number as a reason of sparing for he knoweth what Infants are in Nineveh how innocent they were of grosse provocations and that there was much cattel there and from that pleads that so great a City wherein there are so many Infants and so much cattel should be spared 9. The children of the Lord will at last be cleared and satisfied with all the Lords dispensations and will submit to Gods way in them as only right and wise however they repine under their fits of tentation for the Lord gets the last word in this debate and therefore it is evident from Jonah's silence and not answering again that he submitted at last in testimony whereof and of his unfeigned repentance for his miscarriage he glorifieth God in registring all these passages for the edification of the Church whereby also is held forth the infallible certainty of holy Scripture in that the Penmen thereof were so little their own in writing of it as they spare not at Gods command to register their own infirmities that he may be glorified MICAH The ARGUMENT THis Prophet living almost in the same time with Isaiah only he was sent out a little after him and his commission is also extended to the Kingdome of Israel is much like him in matter and is recorded in after-times to have been a faithful man in declining times as it is Jer. 26.18 If we compare the beginning of the first and the sixth Chapters which are almost one and the same we may take up the whole Prophecie in two solemn Sermons in the first whereof he foretels the captivity of the ten Tribes and calamity of Judah by the Assyrians because of Idolatry Chap. 1. and because of covetousnesse oppression and contempt of the Messengers of God Chap. 2. and the wickednesse of Rulers both in Church and State for which Judah is yet further threatned Chap. 3. Then he armes the godly against the Babylonish captivity then approaching with