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A51842 One hundred and ninety sermons on the hundred and nineteenth Psalm preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton, D.D. ; with a perfect alphabetical table directing to the principal matters contained therein. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677.; White, Robert, 1645-1703.; Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1681 (1681) Wing M526A; ESTC R225740 2,212,336 1,308

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So Isa. 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee in the night and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early A man that hath an earnest desire after God he will be at it night and day when others are taking their Rest their seeking of God is early and earnest but where such strong desires are not God is little minded and regarded and of all businesses Prayer seemeth that which may be best spared That I may fully Commend Davids Practice to you I shall observe in this his Diligence I. That it was a Personal Closet or Secret Prayer I cryed I alone with thee in Secret II. That it was an early Morning Prayer I prevented the dawning of the Morning III. That it was a Vehement and Earnest Prayer for 't is expressed by crying which as Chrysostome saith noteth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys. in Psal. 5. He proveth it by that of God to Moses Wherefore criest thou unto me Exod. 14. 15. And when Moses was silent yet he cryeth for crying noteth the Affection of the Mind not extension of the Voice Where I shall note that it was an earnest prayer though private and earnest though as yet he could get no Answer IV. That it was the Prayer of a Publick Person of a King and a King intangled in Wars whose Calling exposed him to a Multitude of business and distractions yet he had his times of Converse with God take all this together and the pattern will be more sit to be commended to your Imitation I. It was a Personal or Secret Prayer I cryed I alone and without Company Our Saviour that doth in Matth. 18. 19 20. incourage us to publick Prayer by the blessed effect of such Petitions where two or three do agree to ask any thing of God in the name of Christ he doth suppose that his Disciples will make Conscience of personal and solitary prayer and therefore giveth directions and Incouragement about it Matth. 6. 6. But when thou prayest enter into thy closet and when thou hast shut thy door pray to thy father which seeth in secret and thy father which seeth in secret will reward thee openly He taketh it for granted that every one of his Disciples is sufficiently convinced of being often with God in private and pouring out his heart to God alone T is not if but when as supposing they will be careful of this 't is not plurally and collectively when ye pray but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when thou prayest elsewhere the Context speaketh of publick prayer or the Assemblies of Saints and of Family Worship but here he speaketh of personal prayer Church prayer hath a special blessing when with a combined force we besiege Heaven as the Petition of a Shire and County is more than a private mans Supplication but yet this is not without its Blessing God is with you in private pray to thy father in secret and he that seeth in secret observeth the carriage and posture and frame of thy spirit all thy fervour and uprightness of heart is known to him that which is the Hypocrites fear that God seeth in secret is the Saints Comfort that God seeth in secret it bindeth Condemnation upon the thoughts of wicked men 1. Iohn 3. 21. but is their support Iohn 21. 17. Rom. 8. 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit He knoweth the brokenness or unbrokenness of the Heart he can pick out the very language of thy sighs and groans know where thou art and how thou art imployed Acts 9. 11. Arise and go into the street which is called streight and inquite in the house of Judas for one Saul of Tarsus for behold he prayeth In such a street in such an house in such a Chamber of the house there is one a praying a notable place to express Gods seeing in secret where we are what we do and how affected And then his reward is another incouragement he will reward thee openly grant thee what thou prayest for or bless thee for the conscionable performance of this duty Openly either by a sensible Answer of thy prayers as Dan. 9. 20 21 22. or with an evident Blessing as Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the eyes of the World God highly favoured them a secret prayer hath an open blessing or in convincing the Consciences of men Pharaoh sendeth for Moses and Aaron when in distress the Consciences of wicked men are convinced that Gods praying Children have special Audience with him no Magicians sent for then but Moses and Aaron Thus God may reward them openly 1 Sam. 2. 30. Those that honour me I will honour But chiefly at the day of Judgment Luk. 14. 44. He shall be recompenced at the resurrection of the just Then is the great reward of Christians and most publick then shall every man have praise of God 1 Cor. 4. 5. Thus you see how our Lord incourageth us to Closet Prayer but let us see other Arguments to engage us to this Duty 1. All the precepts of Prayer do include Closet-prayer Continue in prayer and watch in the same with Thanksgiving Col. 4. 2. Pray without ceasing 1 Thes. 5. 17. First Gods precepts fall upon single persons before it falleth upon Families and Churches for God considereth us first as persons apart and then in our several Combinations and Societies in joyning with others the Duty is rather imposed upon us then taken up by Voluntary choice and that only at stated times when they can conveniently meet If we are to continue in prayer and to pray without ceasing we are to make conscience our selves of being often with God Every person that acknowledgeth a God that hath a Father in Heaven must come and profess his dependance upon him 2. The Example of Christ which beareth the force of a Law in things Moral We read often of Christs praying Mark 1. 35. He went out into a solitary place to pray And Matth. 14. 23. And Luke 6. 12. we read he prayed a whole night to God now let us improve this Instance Christ had no such need of Prayer as we have the Godhead dwelt in him bodily nor such need of retirement his Affections were alwaies in frame yet he went out from the company of his Disciples to pray alone to God This Pattern is very ingaging for if we have the Spirit of Christ we will do as Christ did and very encouraging for by submitting to this Duty he sanctified it for all his steps drop fatness and left a blessing and vertue behind him And it assureth us of his Sympathizing with us he is acquainted with the heart of an earnest supplicant and 't is some Comfort against our imperfections when we are with God and our hearts are as heavy as a log 't is a Comfort to think of this particular part of his Righteousness by which our defects are covered 3. I shall urge it from Gods End in pouring out the Spirit that we may pray apart and mourn apart
see what is this Salvation which is here spoken of Salvation in Scripture hath divers acceptations it 's put 1. For that temporal Deliverance which God giveth or hath promised to give to his People So 't is taken Exod. 14. 13. Stand still and see the salvation of the Lord that he will shew you to day That is the wonderful deliverance which he will work for you So Lament 3. 26. It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord. Meaning by Salvation their recovery out of Captivity 'T was their duty to wait for this deliverance and though it were long first yet having a Promise they were to keep up their Hope 2. For the Exhibition of Christ in the Flesh. Psal. 98. 2 3. The Lord hath made known his salvation his righteousness hath he openly shewed in the sight of the heathen He hath remembred his mercy and truth to the house of Israel all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God Clearly that Psalm containeth a Prediction of the setting up of Christ's Kingdom and a bringing of the Gentile World into subjection to it which was first to be offered to the People of the Iews and from thence to be carried on throughout all the Regions of the World So old Simeon expresseth himself Luke 2. 29 30. Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes have seen thy salvation Meaning thereby Christ actually exhibited or born in the flesh which was the beginning of the Kingdom of the Messiah 3. For the Benefits which we have by Christ on this side Heaven as the pardon of Sin and the renovation of our Natures these are called Salvation as Mat. 1. 21. He shall save his people from their sins And Tit. 3. 5. He hath saved us by washing in the laver of regeneration And in the Old Testament Psal. 51. 12. Restore unto us the joy of thy salvation That is the joy which we have because God hath freed us from our sins 4. For Everlasting Life Heb. 5. 9. He is become the author of eternal salvation to all them that obey him And 1 Pet. 1. 9. Receiving the end of your faith the salvation of your souls Meaning thereby our final Reward The Text is applicable to all these But 1 most simply we must expound it of Salvation in the first sense because the drift of the Man of God in this Octonary is to shew how he was affected since God heard him not at the first cry or as soon as he prayed for deliverance Though he prayed for deliverance yet the help promised and hoped for was delayed so long till he was ready to faint and had fainted altogether but that the Promise revived and kept up his hopes 2 If these words be supposed to be spoken by the Church and in Her Name they fitly represent the longings of the Old Testament Fathers after Christ's coming in the Flesh. For as David expresseth himself here so doth old Iacob Gen. 49. 18. I have waited for thy salvation O Lord. That speech cometh in there by way of interruption for as he was blessing his Children he turneth to the Lord desiring his salvation by Christ of which Samson belonging to the Tribe of Dan the Tribe which he was then blessing was a special Type So 't is said of Abraham John 8. 56. Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and he saw it and was glad Abraham knowing him to be the true Messiah did earnestly desire to see that day and to his great contentment got a sight of it by Faith 't was a sweet and blessed sight to him So Luke 10. 24. Many prophets and kings have desired to see those things which ye see and have not seen them and to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard them That is David a King and other Prophets longed for this day So Heb. 11. 13. Having seen the promises afar off they were persuaded of them and embraced them Oh! they hugged the promises saying These will one day yield a Saviour to the world So 't is said of all the serious Believers of the Old Testament Luke 2. 25. That they waited for the consolation of Israel That is for the Redemption of the World by the blood of Christ and the pouring out of the Holy Ghost upon which follow'd the calling of the Gentiles and the setting up of the Kingdom of God in the World These things the Saints longed for waited for and because the Lord suspended the exhibition of them till the fulness of time and did not presently satisfie their desires they might be said to faint but the Promise kept up their Faith in waiting and confidence I cannot wholly exclude this sense because the Salvation promised at the coming of the Messiah was the greatest and common to all the faithful They had many discouragements in expecting it from the wickedness and calamities of that people from whom as concerning the Flesh Christ was to descend But though they were ready to faint they did not give over the hope of that Salvation having God's word for it and the remembrance of it kept afoot by the Sacrifices and Types of the Law 3 Since Christ hath appeared in the Flesh and hath wrought Salvation for us we must wait and long and look for that part of Salvation which is yet to be performed as the deliverance of the Church from divers Troubles the freedom of particular Believers from their doubts and fears and finally our eternal Salvation which shall be compleated at Christ's second coming All that have the first-fruits of the Spirit are groaning for this and hoping for this Rom. 8. 23 24 25. We are to desire Heaven yet patiently to stay God's time for here is fainting and hoping or as the Apostle saith hastening to and yet waiting for the coming of the Lord 2 Pet. 3. 12. one is the effect of Desire the other of Hope Desire hastening and Hope waiting These things being cleared let us first apply the words to Temporal Deliverance Observe I. DOCT. The Afflictions of God's People may be long and grievous before any Comfort and Deliverance cometh For the Affliction continued so long upon David that his Soul even fainted There are three Agents in the Afflictions of the Saints 1. GOD. 2. SATAN 3. WICKED MEN. 1. God hath many wise Reasons why he doth not give Audience or a gracious Answer at the first call First Because he will try our Faith to see if we can depend upon him when it cometh to an extremity Thus by silence and rebukes Christ tryed the Woman of Canaan that her Faith might appear the more gloriously Mat. 15. 28. Then Iesus answered and said unto her O woman great is thy faith And by extremities he still tryeth his children Our graces are never exercised to the life till we are near the point of death that 's Faith which can then depend
To press you to walk according to this rule if you would be blessed To this end let me press you to take the Law of God for your Rule the Spirit of God for your Guide the Promises for your encouragement and the Glory of God for your end 1. Take the Law of God for your Rule Study the mind of God and know the way to Heaven and keep exactly in it It is an argument of sincerity when a man is careful to practise all that he knows and to be inquisitive to know more even the whole will of God and when the heart is held under awe of Gods word If a Commandement stand in the way it is more to a gracious heart than if a thousand Bears and Lyons were in the way more than if an Angel stood in the way with a flaming sword Prov. 13. 13. He that feareth the Commandment shall be rewarded Would you have blessings from God fear the Commandment It is not he that fears wrath punishment inconveniencies troubles of the world molestations of the flesh no but he that dares not make bold with a Commandment As Ier. 35. 6. Go bring a temptation set pots of Wine before the Rechabites O they durst not drink of them why Ionadab the son of Rechab our father commanded us saying Ye shall drink no wine Thus a child of God doth reason when the Devil comes and sets a temptation before him and being zealous for God dares not comply with the lusts and humours of men though they should promise him peace happiness and plenty A wicked man makes no bones of a Commandment but a godly man when he is in a right posture of spirit and the awe of God is upon him dare not knowingly and wittingly go aside and depart from God 2. Take the Spirit of God for your Guide We can never walk in Gods way without the conduct of Gods Spirit We must not only have a way but a voice to direct us when we are wandering Isa. 30. 21. And thine ears shall hear a word behind thee saying This is the way walk in it Sheep have a Shepherd as well as a Fold and children that learn to write must have a Teacher as well as a Copy and so it is not enough to have a Rule but we must have a Guide a Monitor to put us in mind of our duty The Israelites had a pillar of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night The Gospel-Church is not destitute of a Guide Psal. 37. 24. Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel and afterwards receive me to glory The Spirit of God is the Guide and Director to warn us of our duty 3. The Promises for your encouragement If you look elsewhere and live by sense and not by faith you shall have discouragements enough How shall a man carry himself through the temptations of the world with honour to God 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature having escaped the corruptions that are in the world through lust When we have promises to bear us up this will carry us clear through temptations and make us act generously nobly and keep close to him 4. Fix the Glory of God for your aim else it is but a carnal course The spiritual life is a living to God Gal. 2. 20. when he is made the end of every action You have a journey to take and whether you sleep or wake your journey is still a going As in a ship whether men sit lye or walk whether they eat or sleep the ship holds on its course and makes towards its Port. So you all are going into another World either to Heaven or Hell the broad or the narrow way and then do but consider how comfortable it will be at your journey's end in a dying hour to have been undefiled in the way then wicked men that are defiled in their way will wish they had kept more close and exact with God even those that now wonder at the niceness and zeal of others when they see that they must in earnest into another world oh then that they had been more exact and watchful and stuck closer to the Rule in their practice discourses compliances Men will have other notions then of holiness than they had before oh then they 'l wish that they had beem more circumspect Christ commended the unjust Steward for remembring that in time he should be put out of his Stewardship You will all fail within a little while then your poor shiftless naked souls must launch out into another world and immediately come to God How comfortable will it be then to have walked closely according to the line of Obedience The Third Point That a close walker not only shall be blessed but is blessed in hand as well as in hope How is he blessed 1. He is freed from wrath he hath his discharge and the blessedness of a pardoned man Joh. 5. 24. He that believeth on Christ hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation for he hath passed from death to life he is out of danger of perishing which is a great mercy 2. He is taken into favour and respect with God Joh. 15. 14. Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you There is a real friendship made up between us and Christ not only in point of harmony and agreement of mind but mutual delight and fellowship with each other 3. He is under the special care and conduct of Gods Providence that he may not miscarry 1 Cor. 3. 23. All things are yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods All the conditions of his life are over-ruled for good his blessings are sanctified and his miseries unstinged Rom. 8. 28. And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose 4. He hath a sure Covenant-right to everlasting glory 1 Joh. 3. 1. Behold now are we the sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be c. Is a Title nothing before we come to enjoy the Estate We count a Worldly Heir happy as well as a Possessor and are not Gods Heirs happy 5. He hath sweet experiences of Gods goodness towards him here in this world Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness The joy of the presence and sense of the Lords love will counterbalance all worldly joys 6. He hath a great deal of peace Gal. 6. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Obedience and holy walking bringeth peace Great peace have they which love thy Law and nothing shall offend them Psal. 119. 165. As there is peace in nature when all things keep their place and order This peace others cannot
ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is A man that desireth to follow God fully would fain know the whole latitude and breadth of his duty A child of God is inquisitive He that desireth to keep all doth also desire to know all It is his business to study the mind of God in all things gross negligence sheweth we are afraid of understanding our duty 2. By often searching and trying his own heart that he may find where the matter sticketh Lam. 3. 40. Let us search and try our ways that we may turn unto the Lord. Compleat Reformation is grounded on a serious search A chief cause of our going wrong is because we do not bring our hearts and ways together 3. Desire God to shew it if there be any thing in the heart allowed contrary to the Word Iob 34. 32. That which I see not teach thou me if I have done iniquity I will do no more And Psal. 139. 23 24. Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any wicked thing in me and lead me in the way everlasting He would not hold on in any evil course There is no sin so dear and near to him which he is not willing to see and judg in himself 4. When they fail through humane infirmity or imprudence they seek to renew their peace with God 1 Ioh. 2. 1. My little children these things write I unto you that ye sin not and if any man sin we have an advocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous They sue out their discharge in Christs name If a man were unclean under the Law he was to wash his clothes and bath himself in water before evening and not rest in his uncleanness Now if we still abide in our filthiness and do not fly to our Advocate and sue out our pardon in Christs name it argueth that we have not a respect to the Commandment 5. They diligently use all holy means which are appointed by God for growth in faith and obedience 2 Cor. 7. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God and coming up to a greater conformity 6. A care of their bosom-sin to get that weakned Psal. 18. 23. I was also upright before him and I kept my self from mine iniquity Such as are most incident to us by temper of nature course of life or posture of interests the right hand must be cut off the right eye plucked out Mat. 5. 29 30. If thou seekest to cross that sin that is most pleasing to thine own heart seekest to dry up that unclean issue that runneth upon thee by that and the other signs may we determine whether we have a sincere respect to all Gods Commandments 2. The next Circumstance in the Text is the fruit and benefit They that have an intire respect to Gods Laws shall not be ashamed There is a twofold shame The shame of a guilty Conscience And the shame of a tender Conscience The one is the merit and fruit of sin the other is an act of Grace This here spoken of is to be understood not of an holy self-loathing but a confounding shame This shame may be considered either with respect to their own hearts or the world or before God at the day of Judgment 1. With respect to their own hearts and thus the upright and sincere shall not be ashamed There is a generous confidence bewrayed in Duties in Troubles and in Death In Duties they can look God in the face uprightness giveth boldness and the more respect we have unto the commandments the greater liberty have we in prayer 1 Joh. 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we confidence towards God But when men walk crookedly and loosly they sin away the liberty of their hearts and cannot come to God with such a free spirit A man that hath wronged another and knoweth not how to pay cannot endure to see him so doth sin work a shieness of God 2. In Troubles and Afflictions Nothing sooner abashed than a corrupt conscience they cannot hold up their heads when crossed in the world a burden sits very uneasie upon a galled back their crosses revive their guilt are parts of the curse therefore they are soon blank But now a godly man is bold and courageous Two things make one bold Innocency and Independency and both are found in him that hath a sincere respect to Gods commandments Innocency when the soul doth not look pale under any secret guilt and when we can live above the creatures it puts an heroical spirit or Lyon-like boldness into the children of God 3. In Death To be able to look death in the face it is a comfort in your greatest distresses When Hezekiah was arrested with the sentence of death in the mouth of the Prophet here was his comfort and support O Lord thou knowest that I have walked before thee with a perfect heart And Job 15. 16. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him 2. Before the world a man will be able to hold up his head that is sincere It is true he may be reproached and scoffed at and suffer disgrace for his strictness yet he is not ashamed Though we displease men yet if we please God it is enough if we have his approbation 1 Cor. 4. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you or of mans judgment To depend on the words of man is a foolish thing There is more ground of rejoycing than of shame You have the approbation of their consciences when not of their tongues In the issue God will vindicate the righteousness of his faithful servants Psal. 37. 6. He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light and thy judgment as the noon-day There will be no cause in the issue for a Christian to repent of his strict observance of Gods commands Eph. 3. 18. 3. Before God at the day of Judgment 1 John 2. 28. And now little children abide in him that when he shall appear we may have confidence and not be ashamed before him at his coming He is the brave man that can hold up his head in that day Wicked men will then be ashamed 1. Because their secret sins are then divulged and made publick 1 Cor. 4. 5. Iudg nothing before the time until the Lord come who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and will make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God 2. Because of the frustration of their hopes Disappointment bringeth shame Some do many things and make full account of their acceptance with God and reception to glory but when all is disappointed how much are they confounded Rom. 5. 5. Hope maketh not ashamed because it is not frustrated 3. By the contempt and dishonour God puts upon them banishing
begin to live upon our selves and our own stock and do not depend upon the free grace of God to carry us out in our work 3. When you go forth to any work or conflict without an actual renewing of your dependance upon God it 's a sign you lean upon the strength of your own resolutions or present frame of your heart The Ephraimites took it ill that Gideon would go to war and not call them into the field when they went out against the Enemy Iudges 8. 1. O may not God much more take it ill that we will go forth to grapple with the Devil and temptations and go about any business in our own strength Therefore still a sense of our weakness must be upon us that we may do all in the name of the Lord Iesus that is by help and assistance from him Col. 3. 17. 4. When we boast of our courage before we are called to a trial They that crack in their quarters do not always do most valiantly in the field Peter's boast Though all men should leave thee yet will not I came to very little And you know the story of Mr. Saunders in the Book of Martyrs Let not him that puts on his harness boast as he that puts it off A temptation will shew us how little service that grace will do us which we are proud of and boast of 2. To cure carnal confidence remember your work and your impediments 1. Consider your work A full view of duty will check our rash presumptions Can you deny your selves take up your Cross maintain and carry on a holy course to your lives end And 2. remember your impediments partly from a naughty heart you are to row against the stream of flesh and blood Satan will be sure to trouble you and will assault you again and again though he be never so fully foiled he will not give over the combate Luke 4. 13. He departed from Christ for a season he had a mind to try the other bout And the World will be your lett many discouragements and snares from the love and fear of it 1 Joh. 5. 3 4. He that loves God keeps his commandments and his commandments are not grievous and presently he saith And this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith implying there is no keeping the commandments without victory over the world Now can you do all these things in your own strength The young man was forward in resolving in keeping the commandments but he went away sad for he had great possessions Mat. 19. 22. Therefore consider these things that you may flye to the Lord Jesus Doct. 3. Though we flye to Gods help yet sometimes God may withdraw and forsake us Here I shall speak of the kinds of desertion and then of the reasons First For the kinds take these distinctions 1. There is a real desertion and a seeming Christ may be out of sight and yet you not out of mind When the dam is abroad for meat the young brood in the Nest are not forgotten nor forsaken The child cryes as if the Mother was gone but she is but hidden or about other business Isa. 49. 14 15. Sion said The Lord hath forsaken me and my God hath forgotten me In the misgivings of our hearts we think God hath cast off all care and all thought of us But God's affectionate answer sheweth that all this was but a fond surmise Can a woman forget her sucking-child c. So Psal. 31. 22. I said in my haste I am cut off before thine eyes nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications when I cryed unto thee We are never more in Gods heart many times than when we think he hath quite cast us off Surely when the heart is drawn after him he is not wholly gone We often mistake Gods dispensations when he is preparing for us more ample relief and emptying us of all carnal dependance we judg that that 's a forsaking as Psal. 94. 18. When I said My foot slippeth thy mercy O Lord held me up Sometimes in point of comfort we are at a loss and fill'd with distractions and troubles and all is that God may come in for our relief So in point of grace 2 Cor. 1. When I am weak then I am strong There is also a real desertion for God grants his people are forsaken sometimes Though I have forsaken you for a little moment Isa. 54. 7 8. And Christ that could not be mistaken complaineth of it and the Saints feel it to their bitter cost 2. There 's internal and external desertion Internal is with respect to the withdrawings of the Spirit Psal. 51. 11. Take not thy holy Spirit from me Now external desertion is in point of Affliction when God leaves us under sharp crosses in his wise Providence These must be distinguished sometimes they are asunder sometimes together And when they are together God may return as to our inward comfort and support yet not for our deliverance Ps. 1 38. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthnedst me with strength in my soul. David was in great straits and God affords him soul-relief that was all the answer he could get then support and strength to bear the troubles but not deliverance from the affliction Sometimes the ebb of outward comfort doth make way for a greater tide and influx of inward comfort 2 Cor. 1. 5. As the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Cordials are for a fainting time When children are sick and weakly we treat them with the more indulgence God may return and may never less forsake us inwardly than when he doth forsake us outwardly 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day God makes sickly bodies make way for the health of the soul and an aking head for a better heart When he seems to cast us off in point of our external condition it is to draw us into a more inward communion with himself that we might receive greater supplies of his grace 3. There 's a desertion as to Comfort and a desertion as to Grace The children of God may sometimes lose the feelings of Gods love Psal. 77. 1 2 3. My soul refused to be comforted I remembred God and was troubled My spirit was overwhelmed O what a word was that remembring of God revives the heart but to think of God and to think of his loss that was his great trouble Yet all this while God may hold communion in point of grace Psal. 73. 23. Nevertheless I am continually with thee thou hast holden me by my right hand He had been under a conflict lost his comfort yet he acknowledgeth supports God held him in his right hand Trouble and discomfort hath its use want of comfort makes way many times for increase of grace and therefore though a man may be deserted as to comfort yet he may have a
the Text Wherewith shall a young man cleanse c. In the words there is 1. A question asked 2. An answer given In the question there is the person spoken of a young man And his work Wherewith shall he cleanse his way Omnis quaestio supponit unum inquirit aliud In this Question there are several things supposed 1. That we are from the birth polluted with sin for we must be cleansed It is not direct his way but cleanse his way 2. That we should be very early and timously sensible of this evil for the question is propounded concerning the young man 3. That we should earnestly seek for a remedy how to dry up the issue of sin that runneth upon us All this is to be supposed That which is inquired after is What remedy there is against it What course is to be taken So that the sum of the question is this How shall a man that is impure and naturally defiled with sin be made able as soon as he cometh to the use of reason to purge out that natural corruption and live an holy and pure life to God The answer given is By taking heed thereto according to thy word Where two things are to be observed 1. The Remedy 2. The manner how it is applied and made use of 1. The remedy is the Word by way of address to God called Thy Word because if God had not given direction about it we should have been at an utter loss 2. The manner how it is applied and made use of by taking heed thereto c. by studying and endeavouring an holy conformity to Gods will 1. I begin with the question for as the careless world carrieth the matter it seemeth very impertinent and ridiculous What hath youth and childhood to do with so serious a work When old age hath snowed upon their heads and the smart experience of more years in the world hath ripened them for so severe a Discipline then it is time to think of cleansing their way or of entring upon a course of repentance and submission to God For the present Dandum est aliquid huic aetati Youth must be a little indulged they will grow wiser as they grow more in years Oh! no God demandeth his right as soon as we are capable to understand it And it concerneth every one as soon as he cometh to the use of reason presently to mind his work both in regard of God and himself 1. In regard of God that he may not be kept out of his right too long Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth He is our Creator we have nothing but what he gave us and that for his own use and service And therefore the vessel should be cleansed as soon as may be that it may be fit for the Masters use It is a kind of spiritual restitution for the neglects of childhood and the forgetfulness of Infancy when we were not in a capacity to know our Creator much less to serve him And therefore as soon as we come to the use of reason we should restore his right with advantage 2. In regard of himself The first seasoning of the Vessel is very considerable Prov. 22. 6. Train up a child in the way in which he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it When well principled and seasoned in youth it sticketh by them before sin and worldly lusts have gotten a deeper rooting If Solomon's observation be true a mans infancy and younger time is a notable presage what he will prove afterwards Prov. 20. 11. Even a child is known by his doings whether his work be pure and whether it be right Much may be known by our young inclinations But alas this is not full out the case The vessel is seasoned already But wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way which presupposeth a defilement No Infant is like a vessel that newly cometh out of the potters shop indifferent for good or bad infusions The vessel is tainted already and hath a smatch of the old man and the corruptions of the flesh Psal. 51. 5. Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me We came polluted into the world our business is to stop the growth of sin As a child walloweth in his filthiness so we do all spiritually wallow in our blood Ezek. 16. 4 5. As for thy nativity in the day thou wast born thou wert not washed in water nor swadled at all No eye pitied thee to do any of these unto thee to have compassion upon thee but thou wast cast out into the open field to the loathing of thy person in the day that thou wast born And when I saw thee polluted in thy own blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood Live c. Therefore the Question is very savory and profitable Wherewith shall a young man c. But why is the young man only specified I answer All men are concerned in this work old men are not left to themselves not wholly given over as hopeless but youth need it most being inclined to liberty and carnal pleasures and most apt to be led aside from the right way by the motions of the flesh and being head-strong in their passions and self-willed need to have their servours abated by the cool and chill Doctrines of repentance and conversion to God And therefore though others be not excluded the young man is expresly mentioned unbroken Colts need the stronger bits The word is of use to all but especially to youth to bridle them and reduce them to reason 2. The Answer By taking heed thereto according to thy word The word as a remedy against natural uncleanness is considerable two ways As a Rule and as an Instrument 1. As the only rule of that Holiness which God will accept all other ways are but by-paths as good meaning or the suggestions of a blind conscience custom example of others our own desires laws of men superstitious observances an Apocryphal holiness Nothing is holiness in Gods account how specious soever it be unless it be according to the Word What doth the Word do about all these as the Rule It sheweth the only way of reconciliation with God or being cleansed from the guilt of sin and the only way of solid and true Sanctification and subjection to God which is our cleansing from the filthiness of sin All Religions aim at this Ut anima sit subjecta Deo peccata in se no true peace without the Word nor no true holiness The first is proved Ier. 6. 16. Thus saith the Lord Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your souls The second is proved Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is truth So that a young man that is like Hercules in bivio to chuse his path to true
still with the Saints Have they not this wandring property to the last David acknowledgeth it though there were some good in him Psal. 119. 176. I have gone astray like a lost sheep Consider the Saints though they have sincerity yet not perfection And sometimes they wander through inadvertency they are overtaken Gal. 6. 1. as Noah was they do not run of their own accord And sometimes we err through the darkness that is in us though a child of God be light in the Lord yet he hath a great deal of darkness still It may be he is wise in generals but ignorant in particulars as the Heathens in general they had good notions of an Infinite and Eternal Power but they were vain in their imaginations Rom. 1. 21. in their practical inferences and discourses when they came to rest upon this God So a child of God may have a general sense of his duty but as to particulars he is apt to miscarry the mind may be blinded by lust and prejudice Sometimes they err through frowardness of their own lust there 's a law in their members which wars against the law of their minds Rom. 7. 5. There are boisterous lusts and a man hath much ado to keep his path Psal. 73. My foot had well nigh slipt therefore we had need God should keep us continually And the Lord hath undertaken to guide us Isa. 58. 11. The Lord shall guide thee continually And Psal. 48. 14. He will be our guide even unto death And Psal. 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me by thy counsel and afterwards receive me to thy glory We need this constant guidance and direction from God that he may still lead us and keep us from wandering and turning aside USE You see then what need we have of a guide and shepherd and of constant dependance upon God Of all titles this is the title given to the Saints they are a flock and the sheep of Gods pasture and Christ is called the shepherd of souls 1 Pet. 2. 10. There is no creature of such a dependance as sheep Dogs and Swine can roam abroad all the day and find their way home again at night but sheep must have a guide to keep them in the fold and to reduce them when gone astray Luke 15. The good shepherd brought him home upon his shoulders Lord saith Austin I can go astray of my self but I cannot come back of my self We need often to put up this request O let me not wander from thy commandments SERMON XII PSAL. CXIX 11. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against thee IN this Verse you have David's practice and the aim and end of it 1. His practice I have hid thy word in my heart 2. The aim and end of it that I might not sin against thee In the first His Practice observe these circumstances 1. The object or matter the word 2. The act of Duty I have hid 3. The subject the heart I shall open these Circumstances 1. The Object The word The revelation of Gods mind to his people it is called his Law his Testimonies his Ways his Precepts his Statutes his Commandments his Iudgments and now his Word whereby is meant Gods expounding his mind as if he himself did speak to us The expression is general and compriseth Promises Threatnings Doctrines Counsels Precepts All these must be hid in the heart 2. The Act of duty I have hid A thing may be hidden two ways Either to conceal it or else to cherish and keep it 1. To conceal it Hid so as the unprofitable servant did hide his talent in a napkin Matt. 25. So David typifying Christ saith I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart I have declared thy faithfulness and thy salvation I have not concealed thy loving-kindness and truth from the great congregation 2. To be kept as things of price as Jewels and Treasures are hidden in chests and secret places that they may not be imbezel'd or purloin'd And herein there may be an allusion to the Law which was kept in a Chest or Ark Exod. 25. 21. Thus the word is hidden not in order to concealment but safety As to the conceit of hiding our knowledg that we may not lose it by vain-glory which Chrysostom and Theodoret mention on the place it is a conceit so foreign that it need not to be mentioned What we value most preciously we save most carefully 3. The subject or place where the word is hidden in the heart Not the brain or mind and memory only but the heart the seat of affections To hide the word in our hearts is to understand and remember it and to be affected to it and with it Christ saith Joh. 14. 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me First we must have them and then keep them First we know them then assent to them and then approve them because of the Authority of the Law-giver and the excellency of the thing commanded and then respect them as a Treasure that we are chary of and having them still in our eye do thereby regulate our practice and conversation In short by holding it in our hearts is meant not only a knowledg of the word but an assent to it not only an assent to it but a serious and sound digestion of it by meditation not only a digestion but a constant respect to it that we may not transgress it as it is a rule nor lose it as it is a treasure but may have it ready and forth-coming upon all occasions The Points are these Doct. 1. One duty and necessary practice of Gods children is to hide the word in their hearts Doct. 2. That in hiding the word in our hearts there must be a right end Our knowledg of it and delight in it must be directed to practice 1. That one duty and necessary practice of Gods children is to hide the word in their hearts See it confirmed by a Scripture or two Josh. 1. 8. This book of the Law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night Job 22. 22. Receive I pray thee the Law from his mouth and lay up his words in thy heart By the Law is meant the whole word of God Lay up his words as we would do choice things that they may not be lost or embezled and lay them up as Treasure to be used upon all occasions In the heart let them not swim in the brain or memory only but let the heart be affected with it Col. 3. 16. Let the word of God dwell in you richly Be so diligent in the study of the Scripture that it may become familiar with us by frequent hearing reading meditating conferring about it As a stranger let it not stand at the dore but receive it into an inner room be as familiar as those that dwell with you God complaineth of his people Hos. 8. 12. I have written to
〈◊〉 unmixed milk The more natural the milk is and without any mixture the more kindly to a gracious appetite To mix it with Sugar and the luscious strains of a humane wit doth but disguise it and hide it from a spiritual tast But to mix it with Lime as Hierome saith of Hereticks makes it baneful and noxious Thus he speaks of his faithfulness as a Prophet a publick Teacher in the Church 2. As to the extent all the Judgments of thy mouth without adding or diminishing No part of Gods counsel must be forborn either out of fear or favour Our work is not to look what will please or displease but what is commanded Acts 20. 27. I have not shunned to declare the whole counsel of God If it be the counsel of God let it succeed how it will it must be spoken so David here all the judgments of thy mouth 3. David may be considered as a private Christian and so I would declare all the judgments of thy mouth in a way of conference and gracious discourse This is the sense I shall manage The Consideration I shall insist upon is this Doct. It concerns all that fear God to declare upon meet occasions the Iudgments of his mouth How in the way of publick teaching shall every one that hath knowledg and parts teach I answer No there are some separate for that work Act. 13. 2. Separate unto me Paul and Barnabas for the work whereunto I have called them Paul and Barnabas were gifted and called by the Spirit yet were to be solemnly authorized by Prophets and Teachers at Antioch by Officers of the Church Was it not enough they were called by the Holy Ghost What can man add more There must be Order in the Church though they were called yet they were to be ordained and to have a solemn Commission It is true all Christians are Prophets yet they are not to invade the Office Ministerial As they are also all Kings yet they are not to usurp the Magistracy or to disturb the Ruler in his Government If Christians would but meditate more and see how much they have to do to preach to their own hearts if they would but regard the unquestionable duty that they owe to their Families more this itch of publick preaching would be much abated and many other confusions and disorders among us would be prevented and they would sooner find the Lords blessing upon interchangeable discourse gracious conferences than this affectation of Sermoning and set-discourses Well then we are to declare the Judgments of his mouth not by way of publick teaching but by way of private conference edifying others and glorifying God by the knowledg and experience that we have First In our own Families Secondly In our Converses 1. In our own Families in training up children and servants in the way of the Lord and inculcating the Doctrine of God upon them This is a commanded duty as you may see Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart What then and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou lyest down and when thou risest up Morning and evening rising up and lying down at home and abroad they should be instructing their Families When the word of God is in the heart thus it will break out And ch 11. 19. you have the same again This is a duty God reckoneth upon that you will not omit such a necessary piece of service Gen. 18. 19. I know Abraham that he will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord. God promiseth himself that from Abraham and his Family he should have respect God hath made many great promises to Abraham as he doth now to all believers but if you would have him bring upon you that which he hath spoken you must not disappoint him The seasoning of youth betimes in your Families is a very great advantage The Family is the Seminary of the Church and State and usually those that are bred ill in the Family they prove ill when they come abroad A fault in the first concoction is not mended in the second and therefore here you should be declaring the mind and counsel of God to them Many that afterwards prove eminent Instruments of Gods glory will bless you for it to all Eternity It is the best love you can express to your children when you take care to season them with the best things A husband is charged to love his wife how shall he express this love Eph. 5. 25 26. Even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it c. I suppose the degree is not only commended for a Pattern but the kind it must be such a love as Christ bore to his Church He gave himself for her that he might sanctifie her It must be such a love as tends to sanctification It is a poor kind of love Parents express to their Children in providing great Estates and Portions for them or bringing them up in Trades that they may thrive in the world but when you train them up for Heaven there 's the best love Prov. 4. 3 4. For I was my fathers son he was the Darling tender and only beloved in the sight of my mother And wherein was that love exprest He taught me also and said unto me Let thine heart retain my words keep my commandments and live So for servants it is not enough to provide bodily maintenance for them so we do for the beasts if we would use their strength and service but we are to instruct them according to our Talents and that 's the best love we can shew to provide for their souls 2. In our Converses speaking of God and of his word in all companies instructing the ignorant warning and quickning the negligent encouraging the good casting out some savoury discourse wherever we come So Psal. 37. 30. The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom and his tongue talketh of judgment A good man studieth in his speeches to glorifie God to edifie those he speaks to I will declare thy judgments saith David Wise and gracious discourse drops from him So Cant. 4. 11. Thy lips O my Spouse drop as the honey-comb honey and milk are under thy tongue The passages of that Song are to be understood in a spiritual sense now the lips and the tongue being Instruments of speech and milk and honey things by which the word is exprest I suppose it is meant of a conference and because the word of God is compared to milk and honey-comb it shews that their conference should be gracious and edifying this is that which drops from a sanctified mouth For the Reasons of this 1. I shall argue from the interest which God hath in the lips and tongue and therefore they
may not mistake our way nor wander out of it Respect to Gods word was opened V. 6. and 9. The main Point is this That one great duty of the Saints is meditating on the word of God and such matters as are contained therein 1. Let us enquire what Meditation is because the practice and knowledg of the duty is almost become a stranger to us Before I can define I must distinguish it Meditation is 1. Occasional 2. Set and Solemn 1. Occasional Meditation is an act by which the soul spiritualizeth every object about which it is conversant A gracious heart is like an Alembick it can distill useful thoughts out of all things that it meeteth with Look as it seeth all things in God so it seeth God in all things Thus Christ at Iacobs Well discourseth of the Well of Life Ioh. 4. at the Miracle of the Loaves discourseth of Manna Ioh. 6. and Ioh. 7. at the Feast of Tabernacles of living waters at the Pharisees Supper discourseth of eating bread in the Kingdom of God Luke 14. 15. There is an holy Chymistry and Art that a Christian hath to turn water into wine brass into gold to make earthly occasions and objects to minister spiritual and heavenly thoughts God trained up the old Church by types and ceremonies that the things they ordinarily conversed with might put them in mind of God and Christ their duties and dangers and sins And our Lord in the New Testament taught by parables and similitudes taken from ordinary functions and offices amongst men that in every Trade and Calling we might be imployed in our worldly business with an heavenly mind that whether in the Shop or at the Loom or in the Field we might still think of Christ and Grace and Heaven There is a parable of the Merchant-man a parable of the Sower a parable of the man calling his servants to an account c. that upon all these occasions we might wind up our minds and extract some spiritual use from our common affairs Thus the creatures lift up our minds to the Creator David had his night-meditation Psal. 8. 3. When I consider the heavens the work of thy hands the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained c. the Sun is not mentioned When he was gone abroad in the night his heart was set on work presently And Psal. 19. 5. there is a morning-meditation for he seemeth to describe the Sun coming out of his Chambers in the East and displaying his beams like a cloath of gold upon the world An holy heart cannot want an object to lead him to the meditation of Gods Power and Goodness and Glory and wise Providence who hath made and doth order all things according to the counsel of his will There is a great deal of practical Divinity in the very bosome of Nature if we had the skill to find it out Iob biddeth us Ask the beasts and they shall teach thee and the fowls of the air and they shall tell thee or speak to the earth and it shall teach thee and the fishes of the sea shall declare unto thee They speak by our thoughts 2. There is Set and Solemn Meditation Now this is of several sorts or rather they are several parts of the same exercise 1. There is a Reflexive Meditation which is nothing but a solemn parley between a man and his own heart Psal. 4. 4. Commune with your own heart and be still When we have withdrawn our selves from company that the mind may return upon it self to consider what we are what we have been what streights and temptations we have passed through how we overcame them how we passed from death to life this is a necessary part of meditation but very difficult What can be more against self-love and carnal ease than for a man to be his own accuser and judg All our shifts are to avoid our own company and to run away from our selves The Basilisk dyeth by seeing himself in a Mirrour and a guilty man cannot endure to see his own natural face in the glass of the word The worldly man choaketh his soul with business lest for want of work the mind like a Mill should fall upon it self The Voluptuous person melteth away his days in pleasure and charmeth his soul into a deep sleep with the potion of outward delights lest it should awake and talk with him Well then it is necessary that you should take some time to discourse with your selves to ask of your souls what you have been what you are what you have done what shall become of you to all eternity Jer. 8. 6. No man asketh of himself What have I done You would think it strange of two men that conversed every day for forty or fifty years and yet all this while they did not know one another Now this is the case between us and our own souls we live a long time in the World and yet are strangers to our selves 2. There is a Meditation which is more direct when we exercise our minds in the Word of God and the matters contained therein This is twofold 1. Dogmatical or the searching out of a Truth in order to knowledg proving what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God Rom. 12. 2. This is study and differeth from meditation in the object and supposeth the matter we search after to be unknown either in whole or in part whereas practical Meditation is the inculcation or whetting of a known truth upon the soul and it differs in the end the end of Study is Information and the end of Meditation is Practice or a work upon the affections Study is like a Winter-Sun that shineth but warmeth not but Meditation is like blowing up the fire where we do not mind the blaze but the heat The end of study is to hoard up Truth but of Meditation to lay it forth in Conference or holy Conversation In Study we are rather like Vintners that take in Wine to store themselves for sale in Meditation like those that buy Wine for their own use and comfort A Vintners Cellar may be better stored than a Noble-mans The Student may have more of notion and knowledg but the practical Christian hath more of taste and refreshment 2. Practical and Applicative This we now speak of and it is that duty and exercise of Religion whereby the mind is applied to the serious and solemn consideration and improvement of the truths which we understand and believe for practical uses and purposes Not like a man that soweth and never reapeth or a woman that often conceives but never brings forth living children 1. It is a duty for it is commanded Josh. 1. 8. This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein As the promise is general I will not leave thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. so is the
trouble it is good to divert them to some other matter But every diversion will not become Saints it must be an holy diversion Psal. 94. 19. In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul. The case was the same with that of the Text when the Throne of iniquity frameth mischief by a Law as you shall see here when he had many perplexed thoughts about the abuse of power against himself But now where lay his ease in diversion Would every diversion suit his purpose No Thy Comforts of Gods allowance of Gods providing comforts proper to Saints Wicked men in trouble run to their pot and pipe and games and sports and merry company and so defeat the providence rather than improve it but David who was Gods servant must have Gods comforts So elsewhere when his thoughts were troubled about the power of the wicked I went into the sanctuary there I understood their end Psal. 73. 17. He goeth to divert his mind by the use of Gods Ordinances and so came to be setled against the temptation 2. Among all sorts of holy divertisements none is of such use as Gods word There is matter enough to take up our thoughts and allay our cares and fears and to swallow up our sorrows and griefs to direct us in all straits In brief there is comfort there and counsel there 1. Comfort whilst the word teacheth us to look off from men to God from Providence to the Covenant from things temporal to things eternal from men to God as Moses feared not the wrath of the King when he saw him that is invisible Heb. 11. 27. and Eccles. 5. 8. If thou seest the oppression of the poor and violent perversion of Iudgment and Iustice in a Province marvel not at the matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they There is an higher Judg that sitteth in heaven and if he pass sentence for us when they pass sentence against us we need to be the less troubled If he give us the pardon of sins and the testimony of a good conscience it is no matter what men say against us Psal. 40. 4. Blessed is the man that maketh the Lord his trust and respecteth not the proud nor such as turn aside to lyes Is not God able to bear you out in his work From Providence to the Covenant Providence is a very riddle we shall not know what to make of it till we gather principles of faith from the Covenant Heb. 13. 5. He hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee God over-rules all for good Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things work together for good to those that love God to those that are the called according to his purpose From things temporal to eternal 2 Cor. 4. 17 18. For our light affliction that is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory while we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Rom. 8. 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared to the glory that shall be revealed in us A Feather or a Straw against a Talent a man would be ashamed to compare them together 2. For Counsel A Christian should not be troubled so much about what he should suffer as what he should do that he may do nothing unseemly to his calling and hopes but be kept blameless to the heavenly kingdom Now the word of God will teach him how to carry himself in dangers to pray for persecutors fire is not quenched with fire nor evil overcome with evil how to keep our selves from unlawful shifts and means how to avoid revenge lying flattering yielding against Conscience or waxing weary of well-doing that we may not fight against Satan or his Instruments by their own weapons for so we shall be easily overcome The wicked shall not be so wise to contrive the mischief as a Saint instructed by the word is how to carry himself under it Psal. 119. 98. Through thy commandments thou hast made me wiser than my enemies Malice and Policy shall not teach them to persecute as Gods word to carry your selves in the trouble 3. The word must not be slightly read but our hearts must be exercised in the meditation of it A cursory reading doth not work upon us so much as serious thoughts In all studies Meditation is both the Mother and Nurse of knowledg and so it is of godliness without which we do but know Truths by rote and hearsay and talk one after another like Parrots but when a Truth is chafed into the heart by deep inculcative thoughts then it worketh with us and we feel the power of it Musing maketh the fire burn ponderous thoughts are the bellows that blow it up Eggs come to be quickned by sitting abrood upon them In a sanctifi'd heart the seeds of Comfort by Meditation come to maturity by constant Meditation our affections are quickned this turneth the Promises into marrow Psal. 63. 5 6. My soul shall be filled as with marrow and fatness when I meditate on thee in the night-watches It giveth more than a vanishing taste which hypocrites have USE 1. In all your troubles learn this method to cure them by gracious means Prayer or Meditation By meditation on the word of God that will tell you that we are born to trouble and therefore we should no more think strange to see Gods children molested here than to see a showr of rain fall after a sun-shine or that the night should succeed the day 1 Pet. 4. 12. Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery trial as though some strange thing happened unto you It were strange if otherwise as if a man were told that his journey lay through a rough stony Countrey and should pass over a smooth Carpet-way Our way-mark is many tribulations Acts 14. 22. Through many tribulations we must enter into the kingdom of Heaven God had one Son without sin none without the Cross. 2. That afflictions though in themselves they are legal punishments fruits of sin yet by the Grace of God they are medicinal to his people 1 Cor. 11. 32. When we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we may not be condemned with the world 3. We never advance more in Christianity than under the Cross Heb. 12. 10. They verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness Psal. 119. 71. It is good for me that I have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes 4. Rather undergo the greatest calamities than commit the smallest sin Heb. 11. 25. Chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season 5. That all crosses are
storm more and so lose that which they are so confident of keeping by their negligence and carelesness their spiritual comfort is gone And there 's another mischief the loss is more heavy because it was never thought of And therefore in preparation of heart we should be ready to lose our inward comforts as well as Estates and outward conveniences In Heaven alone we have continual day without cloudings or night but here there will be changes USE 3. Let us not judg of our condition if this should be our case that is if we should lye under pressing troubles such as do even break our spirits This was the case of the Son of God his soul was troubled and he knew not what to say Joh. 12. 30. My soul is troubled what shall I say And many of his choicest servants have been sorely exercised Heman an heir of Heaven and yet compassed about with the pains of hell Iob not only spoil'd of all his goods but for a time shut out from the comforts of God's Spirit Our business in such a case is not to examine and judg but to trust Neither to determine of our condition one side or other but to stay our hearts upon God and so to make use of offers and inviting promises when we cannot make use of conditional and assuring promises So Isa. 50. 10. He that walketh in darkness and seeth no light is directed let him trust in the name of the Lord. That 's our business in such a case of deep distress to make a new title rather than dispute the old one and stay our hearts on God's mercy Thus much concerning David's case which because it often comes under consideration in this Psalm I would pass over more briefly II. I come from David's Case to his Petition or Request to God Strengthen thou me according to thy word Where you have 1. The Request it self 2. An Argument to enforce it First The Request it self Strengthen me that 's the benefit asked Doct. 1. Observe this in the general He doth but now and then drop out a request for temporal safety but all along his main desire is for grace and for support rather than deliverance The children of God the main thing that their hearts run upon is sustentation and spiritual support rather than outward deliverance Psal. 138. 3. I called upon the Lord and he heard me and strengthned me with strength in my soul. Mark David judgeth that to be an audience to be a hearing of prayer though he had not deliverance yet he had experience of inward comfort that was it which supported him The children of God value themselves by the inward man rather than the outward What David here prays for himself Paul prays for others Eph. 3. 16. That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthned with might by his spirit in the inner man Yea they are contented with the decays of the outward man so that the inward man may encrease in strength 2 Cor. 4. 16. Though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day The outward man in Paul's dialect is the body with the conveniencies and all the appurtenances thereof as Health Beauty Strength Wealth all this is the outward man Now this is not a Christian's desire to encrease in the world or to make a fair shew in the flesh no but his heart is set upon this to grow stronger in the Spirit that the soul as furnished with the graces of the Spirit may thrive this is the inner man To insist upon this a little 1. It is the inward man that is esteemed with God and therefore that 's it the Saints mainly look after God doth not look upon men according to their outward condition pomp and appearances in the world but according to the inward endowments of the heart 1 Sam. 16. 7. Mans eye is upon the outward appearance but God regards the heart and the hidden man of the heart that is said to be an ornament of great price with God 1 Pet. 3. 4. Intellectual beauty is that which is esteemed in heaven and Spiritual wealth is only currant in the other world Poor creatures that are led by sense they esteem one another by these outward things but God esteems men by grace by the soul how that is cherished and strengthened and though we are otherwise never so well accomplished we are hated if we have not his Image stampt upon us 2. The everlasting welfare of the whole person depends upon the flourishing of the inward man when we come to put off the upper garment of the flesh the poor soul will be destitute naked and harbourless if we have made no provision for it 2 Cor. 5. 3. and then both body and soul are undone for ever when the soul is to be thrown out of doors whither will it go if it hath not an eternal building in heaven to receive it The soul is the man the body follows the state of the soul but the soul doth not follow the state of the body The life of God which he doth begin in the soul does in time renew and perfect the body too The Apostle saith Rom. 6. 11. The spirit that now dwelleth in us will raise up our mortal bodies But now those that seek to preserve the outward man with the neglect of the inner in time ruine both body and soul. Well then here 's their care 3. The loss of the outward man may be recompenced and made up by the strength of grace that is put into the inner man but the loss of the inner man cannot be made up by the perfections of the outward man A man that is afflicted in his outward estate God makes it up in grace if he makes him rich in faith in the experiences of his favour the loss is made up and supplied more abundantly and the children of God can comfort themselves in this that their inward man is strengthened and renewed day by day 2 Cor. 4. 16. So that a man may be happy not withstanding breaches made upon the outward man But when there 's a wounded spirit and God breaks into the inward man then what good will riches estate and all these things do they are as unsavoury things as the white of an egg 4. The outward man may fit us for converse with men but the inward man with God We need bodies and Organs of speech and reason and present supplies which fit us to converse with men but we converse with God by thoughts and by grace and by the perfections of the inward man this fits us for communion with him 5. The life and strength of the inward man is a more noble thing than the strength of the outward man or the bodily life for it draws nearer to the life of God as the life and strength of the body draws nearer to the life pleasure and happiness of a beast By the bodily life we eat drink labour sleep
is Grace which noteth the free bounty of God and excludeth all Means on the Creatures part Grace doth all gratis freely though there be no precedent Debt or Obligation or hope of Recompence whereby any thing can accrue to God His External Motive is our Misery his Internal Motive his own Grace Angels that never sinned are saved meerly out of Grace Men that were once miserable are saved not only out of Grace but out of Mercy 3. The next Notion is Long-Suffering or Slowness to Anger The Lord is not easily overcome by the wrongs or sins of the Creature he doth not only pity our Misery that is Mercy and do us good for nothing that is Grace but beareth long with our Infirmities that is slowness to Anger Certainly he is easily appeased and is hardly drawn to punish Men are ready to Anger slow to Mercy quickly inflamed and hardly appeased but it is quite the contrary with God It is good to observe the Difference between God and Man Man cannot make any thing of a suddain but destroyeth it in an instant When men are to make any thing they are long about it as building an house is a long work but plucking it down and undermining it is done in a short time but God is quick in making slow in destroying he made the World in six days he could have done it in a moment were it not that he would give us a Pattern of Labour and Order in all things now it hath continued for six thousand years and upwards as some account such is his long-suffering how many of us has God born with for ten twenty thirty years from childhood to grey hairs from the Cradle to the Grave the Angels were not indured in their sinful state but immdiately cast into Hell 4. Kindness and Bounty he is plenteous in goodness God is good and doth good his Communications to the Creature are free and full as the Sun giveth out Light and the Fountain water Thus you see reason why Mercies are plurally expressed 2. The Frequency of it Lam. 3. 23. His Mercies are new every morning that is renewed those that concern the Body and Soul not only merciful in saving once or twice but every day pardoneth our new sins and giveth to his repenting Children new Comforts There is a Throne of Grace open every day not once a year Heb. 4. 16. as it was to the High Priest under the Law The Golden Scepter is daily held out the Fountain is ever open not stopt up nor drawn dry God keepeth not Terms but keepeth a Court of Audience and every day we may come and sue out our Pardon and take out the comforts we stand in need of 3. The Variety of our Necessities both by reason of Misery and Sin so that not Mercy but Mercies will do us good We have not one Sin but many not one Misery but many therefore Mercies are needful for us 1. Our Miseries are many danger way-layeth us on every side therefore the Mercy of God is said to compass us about Psal. 32. 10. He that trusteth in the Lord Mercy shall compass him about On which side soever Temptation and Trouble maketh the assault Mercy is ready to make the defence Many are the Troubles of the Righteous but the Lord delivereth them out of them all Psal. 34. 19. Their troubles are many from Gods own hand Satans Temptations Malice of the wicked world therefore let thy mercies come to me 2. Our sins so many Provocations Transgressions from the Womb Isa. 48. 8. After Grace received we have our failings there remains much venom and evil of sin Psal. 51. 1 2. Have mercy upon me according to the greatness of thy mercy according to the multitude of thy tender mercy blot out my Transgressions where great sins great mercies many sins many mercies In that one fact how many ways did he sin No great sin can be committed alone but one evil act draweth on another as Links in a 〈◊〉 Adultery Blood and this by a King whose duty it was to punish it in others the more above the stroke of mans Justice the more liable to Gods This when he had many wives of his own a Crime committed out of want is not so heinous as that committed out of wantonness he took the poor mans one Ewe Lamb when he had many Flocks and Herds This was done not suddenly and in the heat of passion but in cool blood plotting his opportunities abusing Uriah his simplicity and sincerity to his own destruction his honesty in not returning to his House should have been a check upon David he maketh him drunk drew Ioab into the Conspiracy and Confederacy of his guilt many perished with Uriah in the attempt upon Rabbah 4. The many favours to be bestowed upon us as Food Cloathing Protection Liberty in our service and after all Eternal Life therefore Mercies which giveth us all things necessary to Life and Godliness 2 Pet. 1. 4. 2. The Effect Thy Salvation brought about in Gods way and upon Gods terms In temporal safety we must wait for Gods salvation such as God giveth God alloweth better be miserable than be saved upon other terms many would be safe from troubles but they would take their own way and so turn aside to crooked paths Those Martyrs spoken of in the Hebrews Chap. 11. 35. would not accept deliverance that they might obtain a better Resurrection to wince under trouble and fling off the burden ere it be taken off by God without any sin of ours otherwise we break Prison get out by the Window not by the Door we must take up our Cross as long as God will please to have us bear it David saith Thy Salvation 3. The warrant and ground of his expectation according to thy Word Gods mercy is to be expected according to the tenour of the Promise How is that 1. No temporal Blessing is absolutely to be expected for God hath reserved the liberty of trying and chastising his Children in outward things the Covenant is to be understood with the exception of the Cross and we can have no temporal benefit by it but as it is useful for us Psal. 89. 32 38. I will visit their Transgression with a Rod and their Iniquity with Stripes Nevertheless my Loving Kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulness to fail God will use medicinal Discipline though not satisfie his Justice upon them 2. The Qualification of the Promise must be regarded by those that would have benefit by it Gods Covenant is made with his people 't is a mutual stipulation many would have comfort we plead promises of safety with God but forget promises of Obedience to him as Ephraim would tread out the Corn but not break the Clods Hosea 10. 11. There was food Deut. 25. 4. Thou shalt not muzzle the Ox which treadeth out the Corn. We mind our own Interest more than Gods Honour 3. A Word of Promise calleth for Faith and
Hope in him to be born out in his Work Now if God hath specially excited your Faith it is not a foolish Imagination or vain Expectation like as of them that dream it is God's Word you build upon and it is by a Faith of God's operation he raiseth it in us 2. The Prayer of Faith is the Voice of the Spirit and God heareth the Voice of the Spirit always who maketh requests 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the will of God Rom. 8. 27. He that searcheth and trieth the hearts knoweth what is a groan of the spirit and what is a Fancy of our own what is a Confidence raised in us by the operation of his own Spirit For there may be a mistaken Faith seemingly built upon the Promises whenas it is indeed built upon our own Conceits Now God is not bound to make that Faith good But when we can appeal to the Searcher of Hearts that it is a Faith of his own working surely we may have confidence Now how shall we know that it is a Faith of God's raising 1. If the Promise be not mistaken and we do not presume of that absolutely which God onely hath promised conditionally and with the limitations of his own Glory and our good which are joyned to all Promises which concern the present Life In temporal things God exerciseth his Children with great uncertainties because he seeth it meet to prove our submission in these things for our Happiness lieth not in them Those things wherein our Happiness doth consist as Remission of Sins and Eternal Life are sure enough and that is encouragement to a gracious heart 2 Tim. 3. 18. God hath delivered me out of the mouth of the lion and will deliver me from every evil work In the Old Testament when God discovered less of Heaven he promised more of Earth but in the New Testament where Life and Immortality are brought to light we are told of many Tribulations in our passage yea the eminent Saints of the Old Testament that had a clearer view of things to come than others had were more exposed to the Calamities of the present Life because God thought the sight of Happiness to come sufficient to countervail their Troubles and if he would give them Rest in another World they might well endure the Inconveniencies of their Pilgrimage Heb. 11. 16. But now they desire a better countrey that is an heavenly wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God for he hath prepared for them a city The holy Patriarchs lest their Countrey flitted up and down upon this hope but to us Christians the case is clear Rom. 8. 18. For I r●…on that the sufferings of this present life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us 2 Cor. 4. 17. For this light affliction that is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory 2. When the Qualification of the Person is not clear we must not absolutely promise our selves the Effect Ionah 3. 9. Who can tell whether God will turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not So Ioel 2. 14. Who knoweth if he will return and leave a blessing behind him In this Clause I put Believers who have sinned away their Peace and Assurance 2 Sam. 12. 22. Who can tell if God will be gracious unto me that the child may live He speaketh doubtfully Zeph. 2. 3. It may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lords fierce anger Amos 5. 15. Hate the evil and love the good it may be the Lord God of hosts will be gracious to the remnant of Ioseph In such cases the Soul is divided between the expectation of Mercy and the sense of their own Deservings and can speak neither the pure Language of Faith nor the pure Language of Unbelief half Canaan half Ashdod There is a Twilight in Grace as well as in Nature God in these cases raiseth no other Confidence to heighten Mercy and try how we can venture upon God and refer our selves to his Will when we have any business for him to do for us Mat. 8. 2. Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean 2 Sam. 15. 25 26. And the king said to Zadok Carry back the ark of God into the city if I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me again and shew me both it and his habitation But if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him do to me as seemeth good to him 3. In the Promises of Spiritual and Eternal Mercies when God's Conditions are performed by us we may be confident and must give glory to God in believing and being persuaded that he will fulfil them to us 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed and I am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Rom. 8. 38 39. For I am persuaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. I am persuaded there is no doubt The stronger our Confidence the better 2. When God raiseth in our Minds some particular express Hope as in some cases he may do to these things that are of a Temporal nature and are conditionally promised and where our Qualification is clear he will not disappoint us 2 Cor. 1. 12. Though the Promises of Temporal things have the limitation of the Cross implied in them and are to be understood in subordination to our Eternal Interest and God's Glory without which they would not be Mercies but Judgments yet his usual course is to save deliver and supply them here Psal. 9. 10. And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not forsaken them that seek thee And when God by his Spirit doth particularly incline his People to hope for Mercy from him he will not fail their Expectations Where the Qualification is uncertain yet the Faith of general Mercy wrastleth against Discouragements as in the case of the Woman of Canaan There is the Plea of a Dog and the Plea of a Child in grievous Temptations to fasten our selves upon God God will make good the Hope raised in them by his Spirit Use is for Direction what to do in all our Distresses Bodily and Spiritual Our Necessities should lead us to the Promise and the Promise to God 1. Be sure of your Qualification for David pleadeth here partly as a Servant of God and partly as a Believer First Remember thy word unto thy servant and then wherein thou hast caused me to hope There is a double Qualification with respect to the Precept of Subjection with respect to the Promise of Dependence The Precept is before the Promise They have right to
not so doth our hardness of Heart increase they that were ministerially stirred when they pull away the Shoulder their Hearts grow like an Adamant Stone Zech. 7. 11 12. But they refused to hearken and pulled away the Shoulder and stopped their Ears that they should not hear Tea they made their hearts as an Adamant Stone lest they should hear the Law and the words which the Lord of Hosts hath sent in his Spirit by the former Prophets therefore came a great wrath from the Lord of Hosts When the Spirit is in a way of striving Gen. 6. 3. When you are any way affected if resistance be continued he withdraws When Men blunt the edge of Conscience deaden their Affections they lose all feeling 2 Pet. 2. 20. 21. For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the World through the knowledg of the Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ they are again intangled therein and overcome the latter end is worse with them than the beginning For it had been better for them not to have known the way of Righteousness then after they have known it to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them They sin against former knowledge Experience and sense of the Truth As their Light is so their resisting causeth Hardness and all the sensible work comes to nothing but that is not all it turneth to loss it maketh it more difficult than it was before in regard of us it maketh us more careless when we had some stirring in our Consciences before we healed it slightly and we think to do so again 2. You will provoke God to use a rougher Dispensation when the perswasions of the Word and the strivings of the Spirit cannot bring you to Repentance They will not be won by Arguments God teacheth them by Blows as Gideon did the Men of Succoth by Briers and Thorns therefore they shall shortly find themselves so involved in the fruit of their Sins as they shall not look off from it their guilt shall lay hold of them at every hand Hos. 7. 2. They consider not in their hearts that I remember all their Sins now their doings have beset them round about We should be much with our Hearts considering our Case how it is with us God useth not the Rod till forced to it He doth not willingly grieve nor afflict the children of men Lament 3. 33. When milder means work but half a cure the rest is supplied by some pressing Judgments his Work is stopped and therefore he promotes it this way 3. It is a sign your Consideration is not serious when you are off and on and it produceth no good effect in the Soul A Plaister may be Sovereign but when you are still pulling it off and putting it on it does no good Light Thoughts work not when they are deep and ponderous then they leave a durable Impression Still it is remember and turn Psal. 22. 27. All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord bethink and repent 1 Kings 8. 47. If they shall bethink themselves in the land whither they are carried captives and repent search and try and turn unto the Lord. Some are semper victuri always considering about to live but you must once resolve kindly Convictions will not die nor let the convinced Sinner alone till they appear in the fruits of Obedience 4. The Devil hath his Purposes Matth. 13. 19. The wicked one catcheth away that which was sown in his heart he watcheth troubled Sinners that the work may die away Use 1. To reprove us 1. For nor considering our wayes When did you ever goe aside and seriously debate with your selves about your turning to God Did you ever lay it to your Hearts how matters stand between you and God There are certain Seasons when God calleth you to it and that is 1. When the Doctrine of Life and the way of Salvation hath been represented unto you with evidence and power and you have felt some stirring and trouble in your Consciences did you goe home and say Rom. 8. 31. What shall we then say to these things God hath spoken to me this day now shall all this be lost and come to nothing Heb. 2. 3. How shall I escape if I neglect so great Salvation Now I am called to minde Christ and Salvation more if I should give no heed to these things or onely give them the hearing for the present oh what will become of me There is a special Providence in every message Warning Offer or Instruction by the Word Acts 13. 26. To you is this Word of Salvation sent he doth not say we brought it but God sent it as some message of God for your tryall Do we think of these things which we have heard and learned 2. When God appeareth against you in a course of Judgments cutting off one comfort after another now taking away a Child then blasting the Estate Now consider your wayes Eccl. 7. 14. In the day of adversity consider then is the Duty in Season Affliction doth not rise out of the dust God hath some end in these Providences and what is his end but to make me mindfull of my Duty to him See for what end these things come and to what issue they tend that we may hear the Rod and know the meaning of the Providence If you do not consider God will make you consider before he hath done with you Ier. 23. 20. The anger of the Lord shall not return till he hath performed all the thoughts of his Heart And then you shall consider it perfectly God will follow blow after blow till we do consider his minde and purpose Ier. 30. 24. The fierce anger of the Lord shall not return untill he hath done it and untill he hath performed the intents of his Heart 2. To reprove us for not taking this advantage When we are set a thinking of our ways we have many thoughts and sensible stirrings but they come to nothing because we do not follow it close you think and have some workings of Conscience but do they end in a fixed purpose Some break through all as Saul forces himself 1 Sam. 13. 12. Break through all restraints of Conscience Foelix had his qualme but he puts it off to another Season Oh consider these things will one day be a Witness against you the sensible workings upon your Hearts by the word and rod. Use 2. Is to stir us up-to this Work serious consideration in order to sound Conversion 1. Be frequent in it if daily you called your selves to an account all acts of Grace would thrive the better Seneca of Sextius quid hodie malum sanasti cui vitio obstitisti You have God's example in reviewing every days work and in dealing with Adam before he slept The Man that was unclean was to wash his cloaths at Even-tide 2. Seriously set your self to it Deuter. 32. 46. Set your Hearts unto all the Words which I testifie among you this day It is a
God to command and how reasonable it is that we should obey the supreme being His will is the Reason of all things and who should give Laws to the world but the universal Sovereign who made all things out of nothing Whatsoever you are you received it from the Lord and therefore whatsoever a Reasonable Creature can doe you owe it to him you are in continual dependance upon him For in him you live and move and have your being Acts 17. 28. And he hath redeemed you called you to life by Christ 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. What know you not that your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which ye have of God and ye are not your own for ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are God's You owe all your time and strength and service unto him and therefore you should still be doing his will and abounding in his work 3. He injoyneth nothing but what is good Deuter. 5. 29. Oh that there were such a heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my commandments always that it might be well with them and with their children for ever Deuter. 6. 24. And the Lord commanded us to do all these statutes to fear the Lord our God for our good always that he might preserve us alive as it is at this day God hath tempered his sovereignty towards the Reasonable Creature and ruleth us not with a rod of Iron but with a Scepter of Love He draweth us with the Cords of a man Hos. 11. 4. That is with Reasons and Arguments taken from our own happiness Man being a rational and free Agent he would lead and quicken us to our duty by the consideration of our own benefit and when he might say only Thus shall ye doe I am the Lord yet he is pleased to exhort and perswade us not to forsake our own Mercies or to turn back upon our own happiness and to propound rewards that we may be encouraged to seek after him in that way of duty which he hath prescribed to us The reward is everlasting glory with the mercies of this life in order to it Heb. 11. 6. God is and he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him 4. How indispensibly Obedience to his Commandments is required of us As long as the heart is left loose and arbitrary such is the unruliness and self-willedness of mans nature Rom. 8. 7. The Carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God neither indeed can be The Carnallist will not be held to his duty but leave that which is honest for that which is pleasing and be governed by his Appetite rather than his Reason therefore Faith hedgeth up his way sheweth him that without holiness it is impossible to see God Heb. 12. 14. That there is no coming to the End unless we take the way that there is no hope of Exemption or excuse for the breaches of his Law allowed but the plea of the Gospel which doth not evacuate but establish Obedience to God's Commands requireth a renouncing of our former conrse and a hearty Resolution To serve God in holiness and righteousness all our days Luke 1. 74 75. Our duty is the end of our deliverance In the Kingdom of Grace we are not our own Masters or at liberty to do what we will Christ came not only as a saviour but as a lawgiver he hath his Laws to try our obedience Heb. 5. 9. And being made perfect he became the Authour of eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him He came not to lessen God's Sovereignty or Man's Duty but to put us into a greater Capacity to serve God he came to deliver us from the curse and indispensible rigours of the Law upon every failing not from our Duty nor that we might not serve God but serve him without fear with Peace of Conscience and joy of Heart and requireth such a degree of Grace as is inconsistent with any predominant Lust and Affection 5. That God loveth those that obey his Law and hateth those that despise it without respect of persons Acts 10. 35. In every Nation he that feareth God and worketh righteousness is accepted with him Psalm 5. 5. Thou hatest all the workers of Iniquity Prov. 11. 20. They that are of a froward heart are an Abomination to the Lord but such as are upright in their way are his delight The more obedient the more God loveth us the less obedient the less God loveth us Therefore unless we love what God loveth and hate what God hateth doe his commands carefully and avoid the contrary we cannot be acceptable with him for God would not make a Law in vain but order his Providence accordingly 6. That one day we shall be called to an account for our conformity and inconformity to God's law There are two parts of Government Legislation and Execution the one belongeth to God as King the other as Judge Laws are but a shadow and the sanction a Mockery unless there shall be a day when those that are subject to them shall be called to an account and reckoning His threatnings are not a vain Scare-Crow nor his Promises a golden Dream therefore he will appoint a day when the Truth of the one and the other shall be fully made good and therefore Faith enliveneth the sense of God's Authority with the remembrance of this day when he will judge the World in Righteousness II. The Necessity 1. The Precepts are a part of the Divine Revelation the object of Faith is the whole Word of God and every part of divinely inspired Truth is worthy of all belief and reverence The word worketh not unless it be received as the Word of God 1 Thess. 2. 13. For this cause also thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of Men but as it is in Truth the word of God which effectually worketh also in you that believe Now we cannot receive the Word as the word of God unless we receive all there are the same reasons to receive one as the other therefore if any part take good rooting the whole is received There may be a superficial affection to one part more than another but if there be a right Faith we receive all 'T is the engrafted Word that is effectual to the saving of our Souls Iames 1. 21. if we would ingraft the Word the Precepts must stir up answerable Affections as well as the Promises Every part must affect us and stir up Dispositions in us which that part is apt to produce if the Promises stir up Joy and Trust the Precepts must stir up Love Fear and Obedience The same Word which calleth upon us to believe the free Pardon of our Sins doth also call upon us to believe the Commandments of God for the regulating and
Arms of an Almighty God whom he hath made his refuge our tryals are many and grace received is small in the best but our God is great he that made all things and sustaineth all things and governeth all things and possesseth all things is our God surely his grace is sufficient for us 2 Cor. 12. 9. and his arms can bear us up Deut. 33. 27. The eternal God is thy refuge and underneath are the everlasting arms He can recover us from our falls and lift us over all our difficulties if we could but rest upon his Word and lean upon his Power why should we be discouraged Oh let us rejoice then not only in the goodness but greatness of that God whom we have chosen for our portion 2. We see here that God is an unchangeable God in goodness They continue this day according to thine Ordinance The stability of his works sheweth how stable the workman is Heaven and Earth continue by vertue of his word That man may have the use and benefit of it from generation to generation that the continual vicissitudes of day and night may be continued that man may have light to his labour and darkness drawn about him as a covering for his rest and also that there might be a constant succession of Summer and Winter to prepare and ripen the fruits of the Earth Now if God forsake not the World will he forsake his people for the benefit of Mankind he preserveth the courses of Nature and keepeth all things in their proper place for their proper end and use and will he not keep one way with his children Shall there be a failure in the Covenant when there is not a failure in common Providence as if he would satisfie the expectation of Heathens that look for a constant succession of day and night and Summer and Winter and would not satisfie the expectation of his children when they look for a blessed morning after a dark night of trouble and conflict and the light of his countenance after the storms of temptation Secondly For Subjection which I made to be double 1. Submission to his disposing Will God's appointment giveth Laws to all there is not the least thing done among us without his Prescience Providence and wise disposal to which all things in the World are subjected The Lord's Will and Pleasure is the onely Rule of his extending his Omnipotency and is the sovereign and absolute cause of all his working for all is done in Heaven or in Earth according to his Ordinance and no creature can resist his Will therefore let us submit to this Will of God if God take any thing from us let us bless the Name of the Lord he doth but make use of his own 'T is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good 1 Sam. 3. 18. 'T is none of ours but Gods and let him do with his own as it pleaseth him God is the disposer of man as well as other creatures and must chuse their condition and determine of all events wherein they are concerned We usually dislike God's disposal of us though it be so wise and gracious but consider his Sovereignty you cannot deliver your selves from the Will of God and get the reins into your own hands And alas we are unfit to be disposers either of the World or our selves as an Idiot is to be the Pilot of a Ship therefore let God govern all according to his own pleasure say Lord not my Will but thine be done We are safer by far in God's hands than our own 2. Obedience to his commanding Will. All creatures do serve God as his Word hath ordained so should we do we have Law and Ordinances too Shall man only be eccentric and exorbitant and transgress his bounds Winds and Sea serve him onely Man made after his Image disobeyeth him They serve God for our benefit the Heavens continue their motion to convey light heat and influence to us and the Air to give us breath and motion and the Earth to be a sure fixed dwelling place When all things are created and continued for our use shall not we serve our bountiful Creator We are sensible of the disturbance of the course of nature when these Confederances are dissolv'd when the Floods increase or Rains fall in abundance Oh! bemoan rather thy own irregular actions which are a greater deformation of the beauty of the Universe In short No creatures are sui juris they are subject to God by whose word and commandment they must rule their actions surely none of us are too great or too good to submit to God Angels enjoy Immunities yet are not exempted from service The creatures have acted contrary to their common Nature for God's honour let us obey God though contrary to our own wills and inclinations SERMON XCVII PSAL. CXIX VER 92. Unless thy law had been my delights I should then have perished in mine affliction IN the Verses before the Text David meditateth upon the constancy of the course of Nature whereby is represented God's constant fidelity in performing all his promises to his people Now he produceth his own experience and sheweth That all this had been matter of most pleasant meditation to support him under his afflictions when all other comforts failed he found sufficient consolation in the Word of God Unless thy Law had been c. In which words observe 1. David's Condition he was afflicted 2. His bitter sense of that Condition he was ready to perish in his Affliction 3. His Remedy the Word of God 4. The way of Application it was his delights 1. For his Condition Though he was a man after God's own heart yet he had his troubles Psal. 132. 1. Remember David Lord and all his afflictions 2. For his sense and apprehension I should then have perished Then that is long since if you suppose him now under trouble probably he should have sunk under the weight of it or if out of trouble he remembreth from experience what did comfort him when he was ready to perish But how perished It may be understood 1. Either as given over to the will of his Enemies if he had not confided in God for all humane help and comfort was cut off and then did divine help appear 2. Dyed for sorrow for worldly sorrow worketh death 2 Cor. 7. 10. We are apt to despond and despair in great and sore Troubles Affliction worketh heaviness 1 Pet. 1. 6. and heaviness dryeth the bones and wasteth our strength What kept him 3. His Remedy was the Word of God for he saith Unless thy Law had been my delights Some take the word Law strictly for the Precepts of the Law which keepeth us from sin which doth involve us in danger But rather it is taken for the whole Word of God and chiefly for the promises of support and deliverance I had despaired if I had not consulted with thy Word He doth not here speak of direction but of support elsewhere he found
would desire to know more of God therefore the Word is dear and precious to them because it discovers so much of God Hosea 6. 3. This is their property they follow on to know the Lord. They do not content themselves with their first and infant Notions but aspire to know him more and more for their love fear and trust and all doth depend upon the knowledge of God If we had more knowledge of God we should love him more and trust him more Psal. 9. 10. They that know thy Name will put their trust in thee We know God but as men born blind know the fire they know there is such a thing as fire for they feel it warm them but what it is they know not so that there is a God we know but what he is we know little and indeed we can never search him out to perfection a finite creature can never fully comprehend that which is infinite The Saints are following on to know the Lord they desire to know more and more and there is no such means to discover God to them as this way 2 The use of the Word is to convert the soul and to bring it home to God Psal. 19. 7. The Law of God is perfect converting the soul. There is the perfection of God's Word it is God's instrument for converting of souls or turning of them back to him again For Conversion take it in its whole latitude compriseth this to humble us to cleanse us to bind up our broken hearts because of all these uses the children of God love his Word It serves 1. To humble us for sin Ier. 23. 29. Is not my Word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces He appeals to it as things that we may find by experience that the Word of God is not only a hammer to break but a fire to melt As a batter'd Vessel when it is to be new form'd must be melted that it may be capable of this new form so no such way to melt the heart and make it capable of God's p●…pose as the Word of God no such thing to break the heart no such terrors and agonies like those the Word works and to melt the heart to make it pliable to God's use no such thing as the Word of God to affect us for sin for sin as it is a breach of God's Law or an offence to God 2. It hath this use to cleanse the heart and subdue it to the obedience of Christ Psal. 119. 9. Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to thy Word Young men who more stubborn and boistrous than they that are carried on with great strength and fervor in the very heat of their rebellion against God Well the Word of God can cleanse the heart of a young man As Plato saith of Youth That it is such a Beast as will not easily come to hand Now for cicurating and taming this Beast for the captivating those rebellious affections in youth and cleansing and working out the filthiness that is in us nothing like the Word and it is by these spiritual weapons that every thought is brought into captivity to Christ 2 Cor. 10. and then as it is obstinate the power of the Word breaks the force of our lusts 3. For comforting and binding up the broken hearted Humane wisdom and eloquence can do nothing to purpose this way but when God by the Word reveals to a man his righteousness then his flesh shall come again as a childs he shall return to the days of his youth Iob 33. 25. Though a man before did walk up and down as a Ghost was as it were a walking Skeleton and his marrow was suck'd out of his bones by the terrors of the Lord that were upon him yet when he hath God●…s Word to shew under God's hand for his pardon this brings his comfort his flesh shall revive he shall return fresher than a child and shall return to the days of his youth his strength joy and comfort shall come again therefore O how they love the Law because they have felt in their heart it must be God's Word for that which wounds must also heal 3 To make us perfect as well as to begin the work 2 Tim. 3. 17. it is said The Word of God is able to make the man of God perfect throughly furnished to all good works so that in this perfection there are three Uses for which the Word serves 1. For building up in Faith or increasing in internal Grace The Word of God is not only for Novices but for grown persons that there may be a continual dropping into the lamps as it was in the Vision of Zechariah Acts 20. 32. I commend you to God and to the word of his grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified It is not enough to lay a foundation but there must be a building up Now what is that which builds us up The word of his grace that is God's blessing upon the reading and hearing the Word for the Apostle speaks it when he was taking leave of the Ephesians I commend you to God and the word of his grace that is the word of grace sent among them by their ordinary Officers continued to them blessing the reading and hearing the Word by their ordinary Officers there would be no need of Paul the room should be supplied Habits of grace must still be maintained by fresh influences and they always come into us by the Word of God therefore after we are converted and born again the Word is useful that we may grow thereby 2 Pet. 2. 2. 2. To direct our practice that 's one use the Word serves for so it is said 2 Pet. 1. 19. We have also a more sure word of prophecy whereunto ye do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place In this state of ignorance wherein we are for that 's figured by those words in a dark place sure it is a great blessing to have a light shining to us that we may not wander and fall into the snares wherewith we are encompassed We are apt to forget and mistake our way we are very forgetful and our way is narrow hardly found and hardly kept and Satan is full of wiles and deceits like an ignis fatuus ready to lead us out of the way therefore we had need have a sure guide and a sure light Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp to our feet and a light to our paths It is a light not only to our paths for the choice of our general way but for all our steps to direct us in all our ways 3. To comfort us in all conditions under our crosses confusions and difficulties we have all from the Word of God Psal. 119. 50. This is my comfort in my affliction for thy Word hath
it so it is hear it and know thou it for thy good 1 A sound belief for it is reality that will work upon us Affection is always according to the strength of the persuasion 2 There must be application All kind of operation is by the touch The nearer the touch the greater the vertue so the more close they are upon the heart and touch and concern us the more they work upon us 3 There must be consideration we must seriously revolve these things in our mind and debate with our selves as for instance what a strict and precise account we are to give at the day of Judgment the inexpressible pains of hell and ineffable joys of Heaven generally we do not believe these things If we were persuaded there were a Heaven and Hell if we did think of them with application and say soul thou must one day go either to Heaven or Hell thou must one day appear before God and be put under a sentence of everlasting death or receive a sentence of everlasting life If we did consider them with serious and with inculcative thoughts is it indeed so then let me consider what I must do This reasoning and debating and whetting these truths upon the heart would work upon us and we should sooner see the fruit As Elisha stretched himself often upon the Shunamite's Son and kept stretching himself till the child began to wax warm and sneezed and then he opened his eyes So we should spread truth upon the heart till affection begin to quicken it Use 1. Reproof and that of three sorts of Persons 1. Those that go musing of vanity all the day and never can find a thought for God for Christ for the Covenant or for the great truths of the Word They have thoughts and to spare for other things Do those love the word of God and never spend a thought about it Prov. 6. 21. If the Word were bound upon us as a Jewel and chain then when thou goest it would lead thee when thou sleepest it would keep thee and when thou awakest it would talk with thee The word would ever be running upon our minds if we had any hearty affections to it Christians think with your selves have you thoughts for other things and none for God Christ Heaven and everlasting glory would you count him to be a charitable man that should throw away his meat and drink into the kennel rather than give him it that needs and asks it So would you count him to be a godly man one that hath a sincere love to God that hath thoughts he knows not what to do with but casts them away upon every idle toy and base inconsiderable thing and not a thought for God to suffer his thoughts to run waste yea run riot in envious repinings or unclean glances or revengeful or proud imaginations that can have thoughts for such trifles and never a thought for God and forget him days without number Ier. 2. 32. Have these affections to the Word of God 2. It reproves those persons to whom good thoughts are looked upon as a burden and melancholy interruption and when they rush into their minds are thrown out again like unwelcome guests These seem to be described by those words Rom. 1. 28. They did not like to retain God in their knowledge When men like not to entertain thoughts of God if they fasten upon our hearts we soon grow weary of them Christians to a gratious heart one that loves God and his Word thoughts of God and holy things are very comfortable and sweet Psal. 104. 34. My meditation of him shall be sweet But when they are so unwelcom and seem so troublesom to your souls have you a love to them To be weary of the thoughts of God it is to degenerate into Devils for it is part of the Devils torment to think of God They believe and tremble The more explicite thoughts they have of God the more is their horror increased If it be so with you judge whether you have this affection 3. Those that read and hear but do not meditate in order to affection and practice This duty must have its turn too if you will ever manifest affection and increase affection you must take some time to meditate and season your thoughts Iames 1. 24. For he beholdeth himself and goeth his way and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was They lay aside thoughts of what they hear and read and so go into their old course again When you hear or read any thing of the Word of God the greatest part of the task is yet behind you are to meditate to exercise your thoughts therein When men hear and do not meditate it is like the seed which fell upon the path way Matth. 13. The fouls of the air came and picked it up When you do not labour to cover it to get it into your heart by deep and ponderous thoughts the Devil comes and takes it away again when you work it not into your souls Bare hearing leaves but little impression unless we debate and revolve it in our minds God spake once and I heard it twice saith Iob. He had it not only at the first delivery but at the rebound he went it over again in his thoughts Use 2. Information It informs us why we are so backward to meditate it is for want of love Oh how love I thy Law and then 't is my meditation all the day You think 't is want of time and want of parts and abilities I tell you 't is want of Love It is but a vain boasting and the greatest hypocrisie to say we love the Law of God and never exercise our minds therein For where there is love it will command our thoughts and if once you have found a heart you will find time abilities and thoughts to bestow upon holy things Love sets all the wheels of the Soul a work and therefore the great reason why meditation is so difficult is we have not such strength and such ardor of affections to the things of God The difficulty doth not lye in the duty it self but in the auckardness of our hearts to the duty you can muse upon other things why not muse upon that which is holy Use 3. To press you to shew love to the word of God this way by often meditating upon it Meditate upon the Doctrines Promises threatnings Man's misery Deliverance by Christ Necessity of Regeneration then of a Holy life the Day of Judgment Fill the mind with such kind of thoughts and continually dwell upon them A good man should do so and will do so He should do so Iosh. 1. 8. and he will do so Psal. 1. 2. O do not begrudge a little time spent this way for hereby we both evidence our love to the Word and increase it But to quicken you hereunto 1. The more the heart is replenisht with holy meditation the less will it be pestered with worldly and carnal thoughts The
mind of man is restless and cannot lie idle therefore it is good to set it a work upon holy things It will be working upon somewhat and if you do not feed it with holy thoughts what then Alll the Imaginations of the heart will be evil only evil and that continually Gen. 6. 5. These are the natural products and births of our spirits And Matth. 15. 19. Out of the heart proceeds evil thoughts c. When the heart is left to run loose then we shall go musing of Vanity and sin therefore by frequent meditation this evil is prevented because the mind is preoccupied and possest already by better things nay the mind is seasoned and vain and carnal thoughts grow distastful to us when the heart is stored with good matter 2. The more these thoughts abide with us the more the heart is seasoned and fitted for all worldly comforts and affairs It is hard to touch pitch and not be defiled to go up and down with a serious heart in the midst of such temptations Nothing makes you awful and serious so much as enuring your minds with holy thoughts so that you may go about wordly businesses in a heavenly manner God's Children are sensible of this therefore they make it their practice to begin the day with God Psal. 139. 18. When I awake I am still with thee As soon as they are awake they are seasoning their minds with somewhat of God And they not only begin with God but take God along with them in all their comfort and business Prov. 23. 17. They are in the fear of the Lord all the day long Why do vain thoughts haunt us in duty because it is our use to be vainly occupied A carnal man goes about heavenly business with an earthly mind and a godly man goes about earthly business with a heavenly mind A carnal man's thoughts are so used to these things that he cannot take them off but a Godly man hath enured his mind to better thoughts 3. Thoughts will enflame and enkindle your affections after heavenly things It is beating the stèel upon the flint makes the sparks fly out So by serious inculcative thoughts we beat out affections these are the bellows to blow up the coals it is a very deadning thing to be always musing on vanity Cant. 1. 3. Thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore do the Virgins love thee When a box is broken and the ointment poured out when the name of God is taken in by serious thoughts that stirs up affection 4. By holy thoughts we do most resemble the purity and simplicity of God We do not resemble God so much by speech and course of our actions as we do by our serious and holy thoughts for his spiritual nature and being is best exprest by these operations of our own Spirits You can conceive of God as a spirit always beholding himself and loving himself and so you come nearer as to the being of God the more your thoughts are exercised and drawn out after holy things 5. By these holy meditations the soul is present with God and can solace it self with him The Apostle saith We are absent from him in the Body but present with him by the spirit present with him by the workings of our thoughts This is the way to get into the Company of the spirit to be with him Psal. 139. 18. How with him By our thoughts and by serious calling him to mind God is not far from us but we are far from him God is not far from us in the effects of his Power and goodness but we are far from God because our thoughts are so seldom set a work upon him This is the way to solace our selves with God to be much in these holy things SERMON CIII PSAL. CXIX VER 98. Thou through thy Commandments hast made me wiser than mine enemies for they are ever with me IN the former Verse you shall find the Man of God had exprest his affections to the VVord O how I love thy Law Now he renders the reason of his great affection because he got wisdom thereby a benefit of great value as being the perfection of the reasonable nature and a benefit highly esteemed in the world Those which care not for the reality of wisdom yet affect a reputation of it Iob 11. 12. Vain man would be accounted wise though he be born like the wild asses colt Though he be rude and brutish yet he would fain be accounted wise Knowledge was the great bait laid for our first Parents and so much of that desire is still left with us that we had rather be accounted wicked than weak and will sooner entitle our selves to the guilt of a vice in morals than own any weakness in intellectuals no man would be accounted a Fool. VVell then David's a ffection is justified he might well say O how I love thy law because he got wisdom thereby and such wisdom as carried him through all his trouble though he had to do with crafty Adversaries as Doeg Achitophel and others that excell'd for worldly policy yet O how I love thy Law For through thy Commandments c. In which words you have 1 The Benefit gotten by the VVord Wisdom 2 The Original Author of this Benefit Thou 3 The Means Through thy Commandments 4 The Benefit amplified by comparing it with the wisdom and craft of his Enemies the Politicians of Saul's Court men advanced for their great wisdom and subtilty Thou hast made me wiser than mine enemies 5 The Manner how he came to obtain this Benefit For they are ever with me Doct. That God through his Commands doth make his People wiser than their Enemies It is but David's Experience resolved into a Proposition I shall 1. Illustrate the Point by explaining the circumstances of it 2. Then prosecute it I. First The Benefit obtain'd is Wisdom Mark 1. It is not Craft or Wisdom to do evil that 's to be learned in the Devil's School but Divine wisdom such as is gotten by study and obedience of God's Laws Gen. 3. 1. The Serpent was the subtilest of all the beasts in the field Satan's Instruments are very acute in mischief wise to do evil but to do good have no knowledge Jer. 4. 22. Cunning enough in a way of sin but to seek in every point of duty your souls must not enter into their secrets This wisdom should rather be unlearned better be Fools and Bunglers in a way of sin than wise to do evil 1 Cor. 14. 22. Brethren in malice be ye children but in understanding be ye men And Rom. 16. 19. I would have you wise unto that which is good and simple concerning evil Simplicity here is the best wisdom 2. It is not worldly Policy or a dexterous sagacity in and about the concernments of this life There are some which have the spirit of the world 1 Cor. 2. 12. And a genius or disposition of soul which wholly carrieth them out to riches
for they will grow upon us and therefore it makes for the encouragement of you that they should sooner begin with God 2. It makes for the encouragement of those that have the Education of Youth as Masters of Families Parents and the like Do not say it is too soon for them to learn No Age is too soon for God 2 Tim. 3. 5. Thou hast from thy Infancy learned the Scriptures When we suck in Religion with our milk it 's a great advantage those things we keep with us that we learn young Prov. 22. 6. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it When the new Vessel is seasoned with this precious liquor it will keep the taste tender Twigs are bent this way when they are as Wax capable of any impression Use 3. Caution for young ones If young men should obtain this benefit to grow wiser than the Ancients notwithstanding this yet they should learn to shew reverence to the aged Iob 32. 4 5 6. And then to ascribe it to God saith he ver 8. There is a spirit in man and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding It is not the sharpness of our wit but the inspiration of his Grace he is the Author of all this wisdom that is wrought in us Use 4. To humble the Aged that have not made conscience of their time and ways and therefore are more blockish than many Children Isa. 65. 20. There shall be no more an infant of days nor an old man that hath not filled his days Old men that are ignorant of the mysteries of Faith after they have long sate under the Word of God and have many advantages to improve their youth Heb. 5. 12. When for the time ye ought to be Teachers ye have need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the Oracles of God and are become such as have need of milk and not of strong meat In this sense God is said to take away the understanding of the Aged that is by a just judgment for their unfruitfulness and unprofitableness under the means of Grace They that are much younger than you are wise in comparison of you when they excel you for ripeness in wisdom for solidness and setledness in manners in a course of godliness Those old men that draw near to the Grave before they have consider'd either the end wherefore they came into the world or the state into which they shall be translated when they go out of it those are Children of 100 years old that have nothing to reckon Age by but wrinckles and gray hairs Doct. 3. That the way to increase in spiritual understanding is to be studious in practical holiness The Word that will give you understanding will keep you out of all snares sufficiently direct you to true happiness But how shall we get it refer it to practice practise what you know and you shall know more it must needs be so 1. Because these are such as have God's Promise Iohn 7. 17. If any man will do his will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self They that make conscience of their ways season their course in the fear of God that take Gods direction with them God will tell them they shall know what doctrine is of God 2. They have a greater clearness of mind and understanding therefore must needs discern holy things why because they are freed from the clouds of lust and passion which do insensibly blind and make them stay in generals Mat. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Saith Nazianzene Where there is purity there 's brightness where there 's a pure heart there 's a great deal more clearness in the understanding Reason and Fancy are dark unless a Man have a command over his Passions and Affections over his Passions of Anger Fear Grief and over his Affections of Love and Joy and Appetite towards sensual delights unless he be able to govern these things he will never truly discern the mind of God for the seasoning his course in living a holy life that of the Apostle is notable 2 Pet. 1. 5. Add to your faith virtue and to virtue knowledge and to knowledge temperance unless they be able to govern their affections in the use of worldly delights pleasures and profits they will never have this practical knowledge and therefore the only way to know divine things as Nazianzene well observes is conscientiously to keep the Commandments of God If you would know the Will of God do not spend your time in heaping up Notions but framing your heart to obedience governing your affections by the fear of God and suiting your hearts to the Word of God Alas Those that seek knowledge out of ambition curiosity and vain ostentation and lie under the power of vile affections get but very little true spiritual light they may have the understanding of Teachers but not the understanding to season them and guide them in their communion with God 3. The more we practise the more Religion is exemplifi'd and made sensible so that we come to understand more of the sweetness of it and on the other hand the more of difficulty is in it when there is nothing but bare Notions and naked apprehensions There we have a double advantage an exact Rule and more experience of the sweetness of Religion Prov. 3. 17. All her ways are ways of pleasantness When we practise what we know then we come to know the sweetness of entertaining communion with the Lord and they know more of the difficulty of Religion they know where their hearts are more averse and more in danger whereas others that soar aloft in Notions and idle and lofty speculations have not this experience 4. They that practise study things with more affection than others mightily help their understanding The more piety and zeal any man hath the more will the Lord bless his Studies Paul profited in the Iewish Religion above many of his Equals why Gal. 1. 14. Being more exceedingly zealous of the tradition of my Fathers A man that hath a zeal in any thing will profit more than others so he that hath a zeal for the things of God profits above others A blunt Iron if red hot will pierce through an Inch-board sooner than a cold Tool though never so sharp so those that have blunt parts in comparison of others yet if they have zeal and good affections they will pierce deep into the mysteries of Religion they that have sharper parts want the fire of zeal 5. The more fruitful any Grace is the more doth it abound with us and therefore when your knowledge is fruitful you will find it increased by laying out your Talents Col. 1. 10. Be fruitful in every good work always increasing in the knowledge of God First he presseth knowledge in order to practice then he presseth
them as unto children 2. If we interpret this word Law of the Commandments and directions of the Word and so I do not forget it that is either by way of omission I do not slacken my diligence in thy service for all this or by way of commission I do not act contrary to conscience and the effect of the whole Verse is this Though I walk in the midst of dangers and a thousand deaths continually yet at such a time when a man would think he should not stand upon nice Points yet even then he should keep up a dear and tender respect to God's Law And he doth the rather express himself thus I do not forget it because great temptations blind and divert the mind from the thought of our duty Our minds are so surpriz'd with the dangers before us that God's Law is quite forgotten as a thing out of mind and we act as if we had no such comfort and direction given us The Points are two 1. That such things may befal God's children that they may carry their Lives in their hands from day to day 2. When we carry our Lives in our hands no kind of danger should make us warp and turn aside from the direction of God's Word Doct. 1. That such things may befal God's Children that they may carry their Lives in their hands from day to day That this is often the lot of God's People we may prove 1 Cor. 15. 31. I protest by our rejoicing which I have in Christ Iesus our Lord I die daily How can that be I die daily since we die but once The meaning is I go still in danger of my life Such times may come when we run hazards for Christ every day so that in the morning we do not know what may fall out before night 2 Cor. 11. 23. In deaths often that is in danger of death So 1 Pet. 4. 19. Let those that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in well doing as unto a faithful Creator Let them commit their Souls that is their Lives the Soul is sometimes put for Life for Life spiritual or Life eternal but there it is put for Life natural so let them commit their Souls to God that is in times of danger and hazard let them go on in well-doing chearfully and though there be no visible means of safety and defence let them commit their Lives to God in well-doing when they carry their Lives in their own hands let them be careful to put them into the hands of God let God do what he pleaseth for he is a faithful Creator that is as once he created them out of nothing so he is able to preserve them when there is nothing visible nothing to trust to often this may be the case of God's People that they carry their Lives in their hands from day to day That you may take the force of the expression consider when the People of God are in the midst of their Enemies then they carry their Lives in their hands Mat. 10. 16. Behold I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves When they are among men no better affected to them than Wolves to Sheep and when men have them in their power and there is no outward restraint of Laws and Government for whatever Enmity they have or act against them Laws and Government are a great restraint As Gen. 27. 41. The days of mourning for my father are at hand then will I slay my brother Iacob Till Isaac was dead there was a check upon him but sometimes it is in the power of their hands to do them mischief Micah 2. 1. They practise iniquity because it is in the power of their hand When men are ill affected no restraint upon them no impediment in their way yea when they begin to persecute and rage against the servants of God and we know not when our turn comes then we are said to have our Lives in our hand As Rom. 8. 36. For thy sake are we killed all the day long That is some of that body killed now one pick'd up then another in these cases they are said to carry their Lives in their hands when they are in the power of men that have no principle of tenderness to us no restraint upon them these begin to vex molest and trouble the Church For the Reasons why God permits it so that his People should carry their Lives in their hands 1. God doth it to check security to which we are very subject We are apt to forget changes if we have but a little breathing from trouble we promise our selves perpetual exemption therefrom As Psal. 30. 6. My mountain stands strong I shall never be moved When we have got a carnal Pillow under our heads to rest upon it is hard to keep from sleep and dreaming of temporal felicity to be perpetuated to us then we forget by whom we live and by whose goodness we subsist yea this may be when trials are very near the Disciples slept when their Master was ready to be surpriz'd and they scatter'd Matth. 26. 40. When we are in the greatest dangers and matters which most concern us are at hand now to prevent this security God draws away this Pillow from under our heads and suffers us to be way-laid with dangers and troubles everywhere that we might carry our Lives in our hands for this makes us sensible of our present condition in the world and that we subsist upon God's Goodness and Providence every moment 2. To wean us from creature confidences and carnal dependences 2 Cor. 1. 9. We received the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead Paul that went up and down everywhere to hunt the Devil out of his Territories and to alarm the carnal sleepy world this Paul was very prone to trust in himself a man that was whip'd imprison'd stoned oppos'd everywhere by unreasonable men what had he to trust to but God's Providence And yet he needs to be brought to this to take his life in his hands that he might learn to trust in God that raiseth from the dead The best are prone to trust in themselves and to lean to a temporal visible interest we would fa●…n have it by any means therefore sometimes we take a sinful course to get it Well now God to cure his people of this distemper breaks every prop and stay which they are apt to lean upon breaks down the hedge the fence is remov'd and lays them open to dangers continually so that from day to day they are forc'd to seek their preservation from him 3. To check their worldliness We are very apt to dote upon present things and to dream of honours and great places in the world and seek great things for our selves when we should be preparing for bitter sufferings As the two sons of Zebedee employ'd their mother to speak to Christ
that dye in the Lord. Why the dead that dye in the Lord they were always blessed from the beginning of the world why such a solemn notice from Heaven why From henceforth The meaning is this those that suffer'd under Pagan Persecutions all Christians would call them blessed that dyed in the Lord Ay but now when the Persecutions began under the Pseudo-Christians Blessed are the dead that dye in the Lord from henceforth still Nay the Persecutions here are greater than the Pagan and of longer continuance why because they have a shew of Christ's Authority as the Beast in the Revelation had horns like a Lamb that Beast which spake like a Dragon deceiv'd the Nations inchanted the World with her Witchery and Sorcery that Beast had a pretence of the Authority of Christ Rev. 13. 11. And the purity of Christians is greater and so more enraging and the great quarrel in the latter Ages of the World is about a Temporal Interest the spirit of the World is the spirit of Antichristianism and of all those that hang upon her are the spirit of the World 1 John 4. 5. They are of the world therefore speak they of the world and the world heareth them Now when these are contending for the World this doth exceedingly inflame and heighten the rage against those that would endanger their worldly interest You see there is cause to think that God will expose us also to our Trials therefore we should be forewarn'd and prepar'd for these things that they may not come upon us unawares Use 2. If God's People are put into such a condition that they carry their Lives in their hands then learn from hence That if we have greater security for our Lives and Interests we ought more to bless God and to improve the season It is a great mercy that we have Laws to secure our Religion and our Interests that we have Christian and Protestant Magistrates to execute those Laws that we may in safety worship God in the Publick Assemblies and we ought to bless God But then if this be our condition there are three duties requir'd of us 1. To acknowledge God in this mercy for it is he that hath the hearts of Magistrates in his own hands Prov. 21. 1. The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the river of waters he turneth it whithersoever he will Their thoughts their designs inclinations and aversations are in God's hands And as God hath power so hath he promis'd this blessing Isa. 49. 23. That he will give Kings to be Nursing Fathers and Queens Nursing Mothers Well there 's a Power and a Promise what follows then only that we praise God for so much of it as we have and that we pray to God still for more that we may under our Kings and Governors lead godly and quiet lives 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. and therefore if we have greater security for our lives and interests God must be acknowledg'd 2. Be so much the more in active obedience Acts 9. 33. Then had the Churches rest And what then And they walked in the fear of God and in the comforts of the Holy Ghost When you have a good day you should improve it well when we may walk up and down in the security of Laws and serve God freely O let us serve him much we are not call'd to renounce our interests therefore let us mortifie our lusts Fires are not kindled about us to consume our bodies therefore let the fire of God burn up our lusts If the Saints are to quit their well-being certainly it should not be grievous to us to part with our ill-being with our sins for God's service Look as Salvian de Gub. lib. 3. saith when our Kings are Christians and Religion is not troubled by them now God calls us to be more pure and holy in our conversations now we do not shift for our lives let us avoid occasions of evil now we are not cast into Prisons let us confine our selves to our Closets that we may serve God more chearfully there 3. Bear the lesser Troubles with more Patience when this is not our condition that our Lives are carried in our hands from day to day It was never so well with the People of God that if not in Kingdoms yet in Families in Parishes in lesser Societies there will be some conflict now these we should bear with more patience because the children of God are expos'd to that condition that they have carried their Lives in their hands from day to day Heb. 12. 3. Consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself lest ye be wearied and faint in your minds You are not called unto a resistance to blood As Iulian the Apostate said to one If he was so offended with their Taunts what would he be wi●…h the Darts of the Persians If we cannot suffer a Reproach and an angry word for Christ if we murmur when we are a little slighted and forgotten by men and left out of the tale of the World O what would we do if we were call'd to suffer greater things Ier. 12. 5. If thou hast run with the footmen and they have wearied thee then how canst thou contend with horsemen That is If thou canst not endure a scorn reproach and opposition of a few private wicked men that stand upon even ground with thee how canst thou contend with Horses when there are other manner of oppositions Use 3. If this should now befall you as it hath befallen God's choicest servants and very likely so to do for those Reasons I gave then shrink not but resolve to endure any Extremity rather than take any sinful course for your ease nay be not dejected if it should happen Acts 21. 13. I am ready not only to be bound but also to dye for the Name of the Lord Iesus There was one that had his life in his hand indeed that had the courage to lay it down to quicken you hereto let me give a few considerations 1. God hath given you greater things than possibly you can lose for his sake though we should lose life and all yet he hath given us his Christ. Saith Ambrose We are indebted for a person of the Godhead and shall we stick at our personal interests and concernments Shall we not dye for his Honour who dyed for our Salvation Dye temporally for him who maketh us to live Eternally And give that body as a sacrifice to the honour of Christ which otherwise by the Law of Nature will become meat for the Worms therefore every Christian should carry his life in his hand Phil. 1. 20. either by Martyrdom or Ministerial labours 2. No Evil is like to that Evil which will befal us in forsaking God Mat. 10. 28. Fear not them which can but kill the body c. Shall vve rather than run hazards vvith the Sheep of Christ be contented to hovvl vvith Wolves in everlasting darkness When vve for a little temporal danger
afflictions Again when Judgments are on our selves when God cometh nearer to us and beginneth to touch us with his hand we should relent presently To be sinning and suffering is the condition of the damned in Hell The Holy Ghost sets a brand upon Ahaz 2 Chron. 28. 22. That in the time of his distress he did yet trespass more and more against the Lord this is that King Ahaz If we keep our pride luxury vanity wantonness still our avarice coldness in Religion Sabbath-prophanation if we be not brought by all our afflictions to fear God the more such a brand will he put upon us yea our Judgments will be encreased and the Furnace heated seven times hotter as when the Child is stubborn and obstinate the Father redoubleth his strokes Therefore we are to beg his Spirit with his Rod that we may be the better by all his corrections Numb 12. 14. If her Father had spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven days So if our heavenly Father be displeased and casts contempt upon us c. Use 2. It reproveth those that triumph over the faln and declaim and inveigh against their sins but do not consider their own We should rather tremble and learn to fear from every Judgment executed though upon the worst of men and say Well God is a righteous God and whosoever provoketh him to wrath shall not escape unpunished But this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this insulting over and upbraiding others with their evil and afflicted condition is a-sin which God cannot endure and will certainly punish Prov. 17. 5. And he that is glad at calamities shall not be unpunished If God hath stricken them and the hand of Justice found them out we should be tender to them Prov. 24. 17 18. Rejoyce not when thine enemy falleth and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth lest the Lord see it and it displease him and he turn away his wrath from him Some read it Et convertat iram suam in te he turn his wrath upon thee Thine enemy is not he that thou hatest for a Christian should hate no body but he that hateth thee if we rejoyce in their evil certainly 't is a sign we hate them however we please our selves with the thoughts of forgiving them as not when he falleth so not when he stumbleth not at lesser evils that befal them Many will say They do not wish their destruction but a little evil they could be glad of which sheweth how rare true piety is God will give him like advantage against thee As the leprosie of Naaman doth cleave to Gehazi David when he heard of the death of Saul rent his Cloaths and wept and fasted 2 Sam. 1. 11 12. Therefore to feed our eyes with the misery and torment of others is no holy affection Iob disclaimed it Iob 31. 29. If I rejoyced at the destruction of him that hated me or lifted up my self when evil found him neither have I suffered my mouth to sin by wishing a curse to his soul. Revenge is sweet to carnal Nature but such a disposition as that cannot or should not find room in a gracious heart to evidence his integrity Iob produceth this vindication Though they that hate us be our worst enemies and should have spirits steeped in bitterness and Wormwood against us yet ought we not to rejoyce at the misery of an enemy Yea to mourn at their fall becometh us more if we would act as Christians and to fear because of it is an act of piety Therefore this old leven of malice and revenge must be purged out this being inwardly delighted when we hear of the fall of those that hate us When thine enemy falleth consider Either I my self am like him or worse or better than he If better who made thee to differ If worse thou hast cause to wonder thou art spared and to fear before the Lord. Let us therefore observe the Judgments of God executed according to his word Lactantius telleth us Quod non metuitur contemnitur quod contemnitur utique non colitur If the wrath of God be not feared it is contemned and if God be contemned he cannot be worshipped SERMON CXXXII PSAL. CXIX VER 121. I have done Iudgment and Iustice leave me not to mine Oppressours HEre is I. David's Plea II. His Prayer I. His Plea I have done Iudgment and Iustice Defensio est non arrogantia saith Ambrose he doth not speak this boasting or trusting in his own righteousness but by way of Apology and just defence 't is no pleading of merit as if God were his Debtor but an asserting of his innocency against slanderers There is Iustitia personae the righteousness of the person and Iustitia causae the righteousness of the cause wherein any one is engaged We may propound the Justice of our cause to God as the Judge of the Earth and appeal to him how innocently we suffer when we are not able to plead the righteousness of our persons as to a strict and legal qualification Psal. 143. 2. Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified Well then David pleadeth the equity and justice of his Cause and his right behaviour therein They cannot condemn him of any unrighteousness and injustice and yet endeavour to oppress him therefore he pleads Lord thou knowest where the right lyeth so far as concerneth their slanders I appeal to thee for my integrity and sincerity thou knowest that I have given up my self to do just and right things though they are thus forward to mischief I have ●…one them no wrong Hear me O God of my righteousness Psal. 4. 1. They that look to be protected by God must look that they have a good Cause and handle that Cause well otherwise we make him the Patron of sin when we suffer as evil Doers 't is the Devil's Cross not Christ's that we take up But let us see how David expresseth his innocency I have done Iudgment and Iustice these two words are often joined together in Scripture When God is spoken of 't is said of him Psal. 33. 5. He loveth righteousness and judgment and in the 2 Sam. 8. 15. 't is said that David executed judgment and justice over all Israel Muis distinguisheth them thus Iudicium adversus sceleratos Iustitia erga bonos Judgment in punishing the wicked Justice in rewarding the good Besides that David speaketh not here as a King but as a poor oppressed man The words will hardly admit of that Notion Some think they are only put to encrease the sense I have done Judgment justly exactly I suppose the one referreth to the Law or Rule it self according to which every one is to do right that is judgment a clear knowledg of what ought to be done the other referreth to the action that followeth thereupon So that Judgment is a doing of what we know an acting according to received light Ezek. 18. 5. Do that which
take vengeance to the uttermost 2. 'T is a grievous calamity First 'T is an hard thing to be left to the will and lusts of men David was in a streight he chose rather to fall into the Lords hands than into the hands of men 2 Sam. 24. 14. I am in a great streight let us now fall into the hand of the Lord for his mercies are great and not into the hand of man Men are revengeful proud insolent wicked men will soon exceed their Commission Zech. 1. 15. And I am very sore displeased with the Heathen that are at ease for I was but a little displeased and they helped forward the affliction Deut. 32. 27. Were it not that I feared the wrath of the enemy lest their adversaries should behave themselves strangely and lest they should say our hand is high and the Lord hath not done all this God speaketh after the manner of men Secondly It is a great mark of our Fathers displeasure when he withdraweth hideth counsel from us leaveth us without support and comfort Mat. 9. 15. And Iesus said unto them Can the Children of the Bride-Chamber mourn as long as the Bridegroom is with them but the days will come when the Bridegroom shall be taken from them and then shall they fast Thirdly 'T is earnestly to be deprecated not only as a grievous calamity but as hoping for relief I will not leave you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iohn 14. 18. comfortless And Mat. 28. 20. Lo I am with you to the end of the World Use. Go then and represent your condition to God with humiliation owning his anger but with faith waiting for his help Tell him what a prey you have been to Satan desire him if he withdraw his Presence one way he will manifest it another in comforting counselling his own people tell him your weakness the enemies malice and implore his aid and assistance SERMON CXXXIII PSAL. CXIX VER 122. Be Surety for thy Servant for good let not the proud oppress me IN this Verse we may observe a Petition 1. Metaphorically expressed 2. Literally explained In the former branch we have First The Notion by which the help he expecteth from God is expressed 't is that of a Surety Be surety for thy servant Secondly The end and fruit of that help or the terms on which he expecteth it For good 2. In the Literal Explanation we have First The matter of the Petition Let them not oppress me Secondly An argument insinuated from the quality and disposition of his enemies The proud 1. From the Metaphorical Notion Be surety for thy Servant we may observe this Doctrine Doctr. In deep distress we have leave and encouragement to desire God to interpose for his peoples relief I. I shall open the Notion of a Surety II. Shew Why we have leave and encouragement to desire God to interpose 1. For the Notion of a Surety Symmachus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receive me into thy protection for good Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suscipe servum tuum 'T is a Phrase taken from men when they are Sureties for a Debtor to take him out of the hands of a cruel Creditor who is ready to cast him into prison And thus the Prophet speaketh to God when he was in extream danger and could think of no help but God's First It implieth the danger imminent when a Sergeant hath attached a man and he is ready to go to prison and there is no means for him to escape unless some body be his Surety to answer all the challenges and demands of the Law In this sense Hezekiah used it Isai. 38. 14. I am oppressed ●…dertake for me He spake it when he was summoned to the Grave to pay the debt we all owe to Nature I am like a poor Debtor called to pay my debt speedily therefore Lord be my pledge deliver me out of this danger So doth David here when the proud were cruelly set upon his destruction we are driven to God alone and beat to the Throne of Grace by our miseries yea God lets the affairs of his people run on to loss and ruine till we be in the condition of a Debtor going to prison he reserveth himself for such occasions till brought nigh to utter ruine and all other inferiour reliefs fail And we must be content it should be so for there is no use of a Surety till we are attached Imminent danger giveth notice that the Lord is coming Secondly That this distress and misery cometh as a debt respecting Gods Laws and the higher Court where all things are decreed and sentenced before they are executed in the world so it is a Debt that must be paid and distress is Gods Arrest God is compared to a Creditor Luke 7. 41. therefore the miseries of Gods people are expressed by Chains Stocks Prisons Fetters words that relate to a judicial proceeding To Chains Lam. 3. 7. He hath made my Chain heavy To Stocks Iob 13. 27. Thou puttest my feet into the Stocks To a Prison Psal. 142. 7. Bring my Soul out of Prison To Fetters Iob 36. 8. And i●… they be bound in Fetters and holden in Cords of afflictions To a Debt that must be paid so is sin considered with respect to its punishment Matth. 6. 12. Luke 11. 4. Forgive us our sins for we also forgive every one that is indebted to us God puts the Bond in suit the instruments are but as Sergeants and Officers to demand of us satisfaction for breach of Covenant with God They think not so neither doth their evil heart mean so but so it is in Gods purpose When you are in trouble God hath committed you to prison and there is no coming out without submission and humiliation urging the satisfaction of Christ. You are sent thither by Gods authority and there is no getting out without his leave Thirdly That the party is insolvent and is undone unless some Course be taken to satisfie the Creditor he cannot help himself by his own wisdom and strength out of the danger The Debtor in the Gospel had not to pay Matth. 18. 25. why else should we look after a Surety Iob 17. 3. Put me in a surety with thee who is he that will strike hands with me Man is not able to stand alone under the weight of his afflictions 't is a burthen too heavy for us to bear We have no might 2 Chron. 20. 12. Gods people are often brought into such a Case when the principal is not solvendo the Surety answereth we are weak but he is strong we are not able to subsist They exceed us in carnal advantages if force be to be resisted by force they will easily overcome us unless another that is stronger than we undertake for us Fourthly That the Surety taketh upon him the Debt of the principal person and is to be responsible for it God hath taken our obligation upon himself to pay our Debts to oppose himself against all our wrongs He will take
blind guesses Promises are the eruptions and overflows of Gods love he cannot stay till accomplishment but will tell us aforehand what he is about to do for us that we may know how to look for it Use 2. Is to exhort us to rest contented with Gods word and to take his promises as sure ground of hope I shall shew you how you should count it a word of righteousness what is your Duty and that first you are to delight in the promise though the performance be not yet nor like to be for a good while Heb. 11. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being perswaded of them they embraced them Oh how they hugged the promises at a distance and said in their hearts O blessed promise this will in time yield a M●…siah Iohn 8. 56. Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day and saw it and was glad Y●… hold the blessing by the root this will in time yield deliverance Heb. 6. 18. not only yield comfort but prove comfortable Psal. 119. 111. Thy testimonies I have taken f●… an heritage for they are the rejoycing of my heart For your Duty Secondly You are to rest confident of the truth of what God hath promised and be assured that the performance will in time be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 11. 13. Faith is not a failable Conjecture but a sure and certain Grace Rom. 8. 28. We know that all things shall work together for good to them that love God So Psal. 140. 12. I know that God will maintain the Cause of the afflicted and the right of the poor There is a firm perswasion I know I shall find this to be a truth Men who are conscionable and faithful in keeping their word are believed yet being men they may lye Rom. 3. 4. Let God be true and every man a liar Every man is or may be a liar because of the mutableness of his Nature from interest he will not lye but he can lye If we receive the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater Surely God cannot deceive or be deceived He never yet was worse than his word Thirdly You are to take the naked promise for the ground of your hope however it seem to be contradicted in the course of Gods Providence when 't is neither performed nor likely to be performed 't is his word you go by whatsoever his dispensations be Many times there are no apparent evidences of Gods doing what he hath said yea strong probabilities to the contrary 'T is said Rom. 4. 18. That Abraham against hope believed in hope 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abraham had the promise of a Son in whom all the Nations of the Earth should be blessed but there was no appearance of this in Nature or natural hope of a Child both he and Sarah being old yet he believed 'T is an Antanaclasis an elegant Figure having the form of a contradiction he goeth upon Gods naked word Then Faith standeth upon its own Basis and Legs which is not probabilities but his word of promise Every thing is strongest upon its own Basis which God and Nature have appointed For as the Earth hangeth on nothing in the midst of the Air but there is its place Faith is seated most firmly on the word of God who is able to perform what he saith Fourthly This Faith must conquer our fears and cares and troubles Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tidings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. He must fix the heart without wavering Psal. 56. 4. In God I will praise his word in God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do unto me The force of Faith is seen in calming our passions and sinful fears which otherwise would weaken our reverence and respect to God Fifthly Above all this you are to glorifie God publickly not only in the quiet of your hearts but by your carriage before others Iohn 3. 33. Put to his Seal that God is true 't is not said Believed or professed but put to his Seal We seal the truth of God as his Witnesses when we confirm others in the faith and belief of the promises by our joyfulness in all conditions patience under crosses diligence in holiness hope and comfort in great streights Numb 20. 12. God was angry with Moses and Aaron because ye believe not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the Children of Israel We are not only to believe God our selves but to sanctifie him in the eyes of others as when the Thessalonians had received the word in much assurance in much affliction and much joy in the Holy Ghost The Apostle telleth them They were examples to all that believed in Achaia and Macedonia 1 Thess. 1. 5. The worthiness and generousness of our Faith should be a confutation of our base fears but a confirmation of the Gospel But we are so far from confirming the weak that we offend the strong and instead of being a confirmation to the Gospel we are a confutation of it Use 3. Is reproof to us that we do no more build upon this word of righteousness 1. Some count these vain words and the comforts thence deduced fanatical illusions and hopes and joys phantastical impressions Psal. 22. 7 8. All they that see me laugh me to scorn they shoot out the Lip they shake the head saying He trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him Nothing so ridiculous in the worlds eye as trust or dependance or unseen comforts Ungodly Wits make the life of Faith a sport and matter of laughter 2. Some though not so bad as the former they may have more modesty yet as little Faith since they are all for the present world present delights present temptations With many one thing in hand is more than the greatest promises of better things to come 2 Tim. 4. 10. they have no patience Afflictions are smart for the present Heb. 12. 11. No affliction for the present seemeth joyous but grievous Yea they do not deal equally with God and man If a man promise they reckon much of that Qui petat accipiet c. They can tarry upon mans security but count Gods nothing worth They can trade with a Factor beyond Seas and trust all their Estates in a mans hand whom they have never seen and yet the word of the infallible God is of little regard and respect with them 3. The best build too weakly on the promises as appeareth by the prevalency of our cares and fears If we did take God at his word we would not be so soon mated with every difficulty Heb. 13. 5 6. Let your conversations be without covetousness and be content with such things as you have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee So that we may boldly say The Lord is my helper I will not fear what man can do unto me There would be more resolution in trials more hardness
this they were pricked in their hearts and said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do The Word can do that which a miracle cannot make the stoutest hearts relent and yield One instance more Acts 24. 25. And as he reasoned of righteousness temperance and judgment to come Felix trembled Mark the disadvantage the Prisoner maketh the Judg tremble the man none of the tenderest a Pagan and to boot an obdurate Sinner but Paul by his power caused these Terrors of Conscience which are raised by the Word all wicked men feel not but soon may they fear them that feel them not Iohn 3. 20. For every one that doth evil hateth the light neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved Conviction in one of these spiritual agonies exceeds all natural passions fears of the wrath of God scorch more and breed more restlesness and disquietness to the soul their thoughts become a burthen to them He is convinced of all and judged of all and thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. His sins revived the poor Creature lyeth groveling Secondly There is a converting and transforming power in the word of God Rom. 1. 16. For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth 1 Thess. 1. 9. For they themselves shew of us what manner of entering in we had unto you and how ye turned to God from Idols to serve the living and true God from a false to a true a bad to a better Men brought up in a false Religion there is much ado to take them off Have any Nations changed their gods Though their worship be never so vain and foolish yet this power the Word hath even over those that have been rooted and habituated in superstitious customes The gods they had prayed to in their adversities praised in their prosperity deprecated their anger when any Judgment upon them magnified their goodness when any good received built them Temples offered them Gifts Must they break those Images destroy those Temples deny those Gods How dear Idols are Rachels stealing away her Fathers Images clearly sheweth Gen. 31. 34. She was one of them that built Gods Israel yet she hath an hankering after her Fathers Idols No humours so obstinate and stiff as those that are found in religious Customs They accused Stephen for changing the Customs Moses delivered Acts 6. 14. and Paul that he taught Customs which were not lawful for Romans to observe Acts 16. 21. Certainly it is a very hard thing to bring men out of an old Religion into a new one 2. The converting of man from a state of nature to a state of Grace So that they are as it were born again Iames 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his Creation It is a hard matter to change natures to turn a Lyon into a Lamb Isa. 11. 6. The wolf also shall dwell with the Lamb and the Leopard shall lye down with the kid and the calf and the young Lyon and the fatling together and a little child shall lead them Yet this will the Gospel do make him that resembleth the Devil in his contempt of God Envy Revenge to be like Christ I say the Gospel doth it 2 Cor. 3. 18. But we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the spirit of the Lord. To bring us to love what we naturally hate and to hate what we naturally love That the heart should be turned from all Creatures himself and all to God That they should be induced to turn from the Creature to God to seek out happiness in him from self to Christ from Sin to Holiness that God's desires should be our desires his will our will his delights our delights The natural heart is averse from this Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subjest to the Law of God neither indeed can be That the hearts spirits dispositions of men should be turned upside down 1 Cor. 6. 9 10 11. Be not deceived neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor thieves nor covetous nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the Kingdom of God And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of our Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Isa. 55. 13. Instead of the thorns shall come up the Fig-tree and instead of the bryer shall come up the Myrtle-tree A mighty change wrought to be changed not only in their lives but natures Thirdly In comforting poor distressed Souls their sore runneth upon them and their soul refuseth comfort when they have all things in the world but yet as there are no sorrows like wounds of Conscience for degree so no comforts Groans unutterable so joys unutterable nothing left that will comfort it is as the whole of their joy the reviving of poor wounded Spirits is one of the greatest wonders in the world Creatures can do nothing Reason and humane discourse can do nothing it proceedeth from the apprehension of Gods wrath provoked by sin Iob 33. 23 24 25. If there be an Interpreter one among a thousand to show unto man his uprightness then he is gracious unto him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransom his flesh shall be fresher than a childs he shall return to the days of his youth Nothing but the Covenant of his peace will still such a Soul a Scripture wound will only be cured by Scripture plasters He that puts the soul on the racks of conscience can only release us I create the fruits of the lips to be peace Ier. 6. 16. Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your souls Mat. 11. 28 29. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest unto your souls Fourthly The confirming and strengtnhing power of the word that we may despise the world encounter all difficulties and discouragements and to be chearful as the martyrs were in the midst of flames all the oppositions of Satan 1 Ioh. 2. 14. I have written unto you young men because ye are strong and the word of God abideth in you and ye have overcome the wicked one Acts 20. 32. And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the word
thy heart for entertaining the light and power of these truths and in due time God will shew thee other things In the mean time bless God that whatever is necessary is plain to them that are docile and heedful and willing to do the will of God As in the world the most necessary things are at hand the less necessary are hidden in the bowels of the Earth so in Scripture necessaries are facile and easie 2. Let us use this method in learning and teaching of others In learning our selves First Be sure to get a clear understanding of and firm assent unto the main plain truths of Scripture That there is one God Heb. 11. 6. He that cometh to God must believe that he is That Jesus Christ is the Son of God Iohn 17. 3. This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent It is a corner truth that enliveneth all Religion Matth. 16. 16. Thou art Christ the Son of the living God then Upon this Rock will I build my Church John 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art Christ the Son of the living God This is the great enlivening truth that hath influence both on faith and obedience We must believe that he is able to bring us to God Iohn 14. 6. Heb. 7. 25. and must be obeyed Heb. 5. 9. that every man needeth this Christ to bring him to God Acts 4. 12. There is a necessity of his merit that God may be propitious of his Spirit as the foundation of a new life that we may be reconciled to God that we should live holily because there is a day of account when every one shall receive according to his works We should bestow more cost upon the main truths to get a clear distinct knowledge of them there must be a removing of Rubbish and digging to lay the foundation of the knowledge of the principles of the Doctrine of Christ before there can be any safe building or going on unto perfection Heb. 6. and firm assent to them For he is the best Christian that doth most clearly understand and firmly believe these things Not the Opinionist the Disputer he that best promotes the interest of his party or side which are the distempers now afoot in Christendome Those truths well accepted would so purifie the heart as we should sooner discern Gods interest in other things and be able to find out that So for teaching our Children God reckons on it from his people Gen. 18. 19. For I know Abraham that he will command his Children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord to do Iustice and Iudgment Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words that I command thee this day shall ●…e in thy heart and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy Children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest by the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up Train them up in wholesome truths in the nurture and admoni●…ion of the Lord Ephes. 6. 4. how to carry themselves towards God in matters of Religion how towards men in righteousness civility and good manners chiefly that they may be instructed in the knowledge of Christ and salvation by him 3. Let the entertainment we have upon our first entrance into the study of Religion encourage us to follow on to know the Lord that we may see more into his mind and counsel concerning us When we are first serious we have notable experience of light and comfort and power this is a bribe to draw us on further more light for it is a growing thing Prov. 4. 18. The path of the Iust is as the shining light that shineth more and more to the perfect day more taste 1 Pet. 2. 3 4. If so be that ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious to whom coming as to a living stone c. It should sharpen and put an edge upon our desires more power Iames 1. 18 19. Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth that we should be a kind of first-fruits of his creation wherefore my beloved brethren let every man be swift to hear slow to speak slow to wrath You saw the entrance and your first acquaintance with the word succeeded well Doctr. II. By the word of God we get light or our understandings are enlightened Prov. 6. 23. For the Commandment is a lamp and the Law is light and reproofs of instruction are the way of life 1. Light is a great benefit This is the perfection of the rational Nature the benefit that we have above the Beasts He teacheth us more than the Beasts of the field They are guided by instinct ruled by a Rod of Iron we have Reason and in it more resemble God who is light and in him is no darkness at all 1 Iohn 1. 5. we come nearest to our happiness in heaven it is called The inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. Our knowledge is perfected and the vision of God is our happiness 1 Cor. 13. 12. For now we see through a glass darkly then face to face now I know in part then I shall know even as also I am known 2. This light hath excellent properties First It is lux manifestans it manifesteth it self and all things else How do I see the Sun but by the Sun by its own light how do I know the Scripture to be the Word of God but by the light that shineth in it commending it self to my Conscience So it manifests all things else By this light a man may see every thing in its own colours it layeth open all the frauds and impostures of Satan the vanity of worldly things the deceits of the heart the odiousness of sin Ephes. 5. 8. 13. All things that be reproved are made manifest by light for whatsoever doth make manifest is light It sets out the odiousness of sin as a breach of Gods most holy Law enmity against the Great God the procurer of his eternal wrath Nothing manifests things as this light doth Secondly It is lux dirigens a directing light that we may see our way and work As the Sun lighteth man to his labour so doth this direct us in all conditions Psal. 119. 105. Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my paths It directs us how to manage our selves in all conditions in prosperity adversity in all affairs paths steps in all the particular actions of our life it filleth us with spiritual prudence the wayfaring the fool a man of parts that is a stranger the man of mean parts all may meet with plain and clear directions hence to guide them in the way to Heaven Thirdly It is lux vivificans a quickening light Lux est vehiculum influentiarum Joh. 8. 12. I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of
3. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh c. Then 3. God taking occasion by this miserable estate opened a door of hope by Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them God hath set up a new Court of righteousness and life where sinners may appear where Grace taketh the Throne and the Judge is Christ and the Gospel the Rule and Faith and sincere obedience accepted 4. The Lord giveth notice to fallen man and sendeth him word That if he will come to this Court and put himself under the Laws thereof he shall be delivered from the Curse Luke 1. 77 78 79. To give knowledge of salvation to his people by the remission of their sins Through the tender mercies of our God whereby the day-spring from on high hath visited us to give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death to guide their feet into the way of peace 5. Because men are backward he hunteth and pursueth them by the Curse of the Law and the sense men have of it to take Sanctuary at his grace Heb. 6. 18. That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us 6. When a poor Creature cometh he receiveth him graciously Ier. 3. 12 13. Return thou backsliding Israel saith the Lord and I will not cause mine anger to fall upon you for I am merciful saith the Lord and I will not keep anger for ever Only acknowledge thine iniquity that thou hast transgressed against the Lord thy God 1 Iohn 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness If he had not set up another Court of righteousness no tears no repentance could have helped us there had been no help that way Now he is willing to receive you he standeth with his arms open From first to last he dealeth with us upon terms of Grace II. Judgment is put for manner and custome or course Gen. 40. 13. Thou shalt deliver Pharaoh his Cup after the former manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Iosh. 6. 15. They compassed the City after the same manner The same word again 1 Sam. 2. 13. The Priests custom with the people was c. 1 Sam. 8. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This will be the manner of the King that shall reign over you 1 Sam. 27. 11. So did David and so will be his manner So in other places Doctr. I. That it is Gods constant method to encourgae all those that serve him by shewing to them all manner of expressions of favour and mercy The Proposition is often expressed in Scripture Psal. 25. 10. All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant and his Testimonies Psal. 84. 11. For the Lord God is a Sun and a Shield the Lord will give grace and glory no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly Psal. 34. 10. The young Lions do lack and suffer hunger but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing David presumeth it Psal. 23. 6. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life And many other places But it seemeth to be contradicted by sense They that love God most are most calamitous and have many afflictions Answ. 1. These belong to Gods Covenant and are expressions of his good will and faithfulness Psal. 119. 75. I know Lord that thy judgments are right and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me God were not faithful nor merciful if he did not now and then take the Rod in hand our need our good requireth it Heb. 12. 10. For they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness Discipline is necessary for a Child as food Winter as necessary as Summer rainy Days as fair Days to curb the wantonness of the Flesh and to withdraw the fuel of our Lusts. 2. He useth to shew mercy to people in their afflictions to cause light to rise to them in darkness 2 Cor. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. We are not capable of taking in spiritual comforts till we are separated from the dregs of worldly affections 3. God will sanctifie afflictions Rom. 8. 28. All things shall work together for good to them that love God And he will finally deliver when the Season calleth for it 1 Cor. 10. 13. There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man but God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to bear it But he dealeth more hardly with them than others he doth not punish the gross iniquities of his Adversaries when the lesser failings of his people are severely chastised Answ. It is meet Iudgment should begin at the house of God 1 Pet. 4. 17. That it may be known God doth not favour any in their sins Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the Families of the Earth therefore will I punish you for all your iniquities Their sins though small have more aggravations being committed against clearest light dearest love Ezra 9. 13. And after all that is come upon us for our evil deeds should we again break thy Commandments Isai. 26. 10. Let favour be shewed to the wicked yet will he not learn righteousness God is jealous over his people and careful to have them reclaimed from every evil course 1 Cor. 11. 32. But when we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world In the bitterness of the Rod God discovereth the vileness of their sin for he will reclaim them when he suffereth others to walk in their own way 4. His enemies shall in time taste the Dregs of that Cup whereof his own people tast a little Psal. 75. 8. For in the hand of the Lord there is a Cup the Wine is red it is full of mixture he poureth out of the same but the dregs thereof all the wicked of the Earth shall wring them out and drink them Jer. 25. 29. For lo I begin to bring evil on this City that is called by my name and shall ye be utterly unpunished Ye shall not be unpunished for I will call for a sword upon all the inhabitants of the earth saith the Lord of Hosts They shall have the bottom 5. In the mean time Gods people have his love their sins are pardoned they are admitted into communion with him and Gods mercy and favour to his people must not be judged by temporal accidents
worthy to be believed The Summ is God hath his Testimonies extant their Authority is inviolable and their Justice and Truth immutable Some read Praecepisti Iustitiam Testimoniorum tuorum fidem valde Thou hast highly charged and earnestly commanded the righteousness and faithfulness of thy Testimonies as referring to our Duty But most Translations agree with ours Our duty indeed may be inferred but I shall not make it the formal interpretation of the place In the Texture of the Words in the Hebrew these Attributes are given to the Word it self Doctr. They that would profit by the word or rule of faith and manners which God hath commanded them to observe should look upon it as righteous and very faithful So did David here and elsewhere Psal. 19. 9. The Iudgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether I shall make good the Point by these Considerations Prop. 1. That our faith and obedience must be well-grounded or else they will have no firmness and stability The want of a foundation is the cause of many a ruinous Building Men carry on a fair and lofty Structure of profession but when the Winds of boisterous temptations are let loose upon them all is blown down because they build upon the Sand and not upon the Rock They take up this profession without sound evidence and conviction in their Consciences and so they are not grounded or setled in the faith Col. 1. 23. not rooted and grounded in love Ephes. 3. 7. They take up Religion sleightly not looking into the reasons of it upon Tradition or vulgar esteem they are not undoubtedly perswaded that it is the very truth of God The good Seed withered that fell upon the stony ground because there was no depth of Earth Matth. 13. 5. no considerable strength of soil to feed faith Prop. 2. Faith and obedience cannot be well-grounded but on such a Doctrine as is true and righteous for who can depend on that which is not true or who can obey that which is not righteous Truth is the only sure foundation for faith to build upon and righteousness for practice Faith considereth truth Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye trusted after that ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation And that righteousness is that which bindeth to practice we may gather from Psal. 119. 128. Therefore I esteem all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way The Word commandeth nothing but what is just and righteous Prop. 3. This true and righteous Doctrine must be backed with a strong and powerful Authority not only recommended to us but strictly and severely enjoyned for two reasons First Because otherwise it will not be observed and regarded but be lookt upon not as a binding Law but as an arbitrary direction There is difference between a Law and a Rule A bare Rule may only serve to inform our understandings or to give direction but a Law is a binding Rule a Rule with a strong Obligation The Word of God is not his counsel and advice to us only but his Law that men may examine and regard it with more care and diligence God hath interposed his authority Psal. 1. ●…9 4. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently And in the Text Thy Testimonies which thou hast commanded God hath commanded us to believe all truths revealed to obey all duties required and if God commandeth there is good reason why he should be obeyed Secondly Divine authority is one means to evidence the righteousness and truth of what is to be believed and obeyed The righteousness for if God who is my Superior and hath a full right to govern me according to his own pleasure doth command me any thing it is best that I should obey it without reply and contradiction yea though I see not the reason of it Acts 17. 28. For in him we live and move and have our being All Creatures have their Being not only from him but in him and therefore sometimes God giveth no other account of his Law but this I am the Lord Lev. 22. 2 3. Speak unto Aaron and to his Sons that they separate themselves from the holy things of the Children of Israel and that they prophane not my holy name in those things which they hallow unto me I am the Lord. Say unto them Whosoever he be of all your Seed among your Generations that goeth unto the holy things which the Children of Israel hallow unto the Lord having his uncleanness upon him that soul shall be cut off from my presence I am the Lord. Therefore it gives rules of practice to be embraced with all the heart as holy just and good Gods authority is founded upon the total dependance of all Creatures upon him and upon his infallible Wisdom Truth and Goodness by which he hath right to prescribe all Points of Faith to be believed and assented to upon his own testimony without contradiction 1 Iohn 5. 9. If we receive the testimony of man the testimony of God is greater A man that would not deceive us we believe him upon his word though he may be deceived himself but God doth not deceive nor can he be deceived by the holy God nothing can be given but what is holy and good and thereupon I am to receive it Prop. 4. This Divine authority truth and righteousness is only to be found in Gods Testimonies which he hath commanded or in Gods Word First There is a God-like authority speaking there and commanding that which it becometh none but God to command who is the universal King and Sovereign For it speaketh to the whole World without respect of persons to King and Beggar rich and poor Male and Female without reservation of Honour or distinction of Degrees The Word looketh on them as standing before God on the same level Iob 34. 19. He accepteth not the persons of Princes nor regarded the rich more than the poor for they all are the work of his hands And speaketh to them indifferently and equally Exod. 20. 3. Thou shalt have no other Gods but me Which is not the voice of any limited and bounded Power but of that which is supreme transcendent and absolute And by these Laws he bindeth the Conscience and the immortal souls of men Psal. 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul. Men may give Laws to the words and actions because they can take cognizance of them but the Word giveth Laws to the thoughts Isai. 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts Matth. 5. 28. Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed Adultery with her already in his heart And the internal motions and affections of the heart how we should love and fear and joy and mourn 1 Cor. 7. 30. They that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not Of these things God can only take notice the power
Souldiers being weary of this Pagan Emperour assoon as he dyed chose Iovinianus that had been banished and a fellow sufferer with him who recalled him and other Christians from their exile and after having reigned not full eight Months he dyed and Valentinian was chosen Emperour in his stead 3. The Third thing we should be zealous for is Gods Servants when they are opprest we should own and cherish them as good Obadiah did the Prophets who hid them by fifty in a Cave and fed them with Bread and Water 1 Kings 18. 4. And Ionathan owned David though his Father was greatly displeased with him and flung a Javelin at him 1 Sam. 20. 32. And Hester pleads for the Jews when they were doomed to Destruction Hester 7. 3. And Nicodemus pleads for Christ that he might not be condemned unheard Iohn 7. 50 51. When the Council was ready to condemn him Nicodemus saith to them he that came to Iesus by night being one of them doth our Law judge any man before it hear him And then they went their way That stopt the persecution for that time Certainly they have little zeal for God that can see good men perish before their eyes and have not a word to speak for them This Nicodemus that was before infirm and weak that sneaked unto Christ that came to him by Night gets courage in the time of need to speak for Christ. 3. What are the Acts of zeal with respect to these Objects 1. It quickens us to our duty and makes us publickly active for God Gal. 4. 18. It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing O how remiss and sluggish would we be otherwise in matters of Gods Kingdom and Glory if we had not a strong degree of Love to stir us up to appear for God in the worst times and in the way and places that 's proper for us Paul when he saw the whole City given to Idolatry it is said his Spirit was stirred in him Acts 17. 16. He could not contain and again Acts 18. 5. Paul was pressed in spirit and testified to the Iews that Iesus was Christ. That heroical act of Phineas when he saw the Laws of God broken and no body ready to vindicate the honour of God he took a javelin in his hand and thrust the offenders through Numb 25. 7. And the Lord saith afterwards ver 11. Phineas the Son of Eleazar the Son of Aaron hath turned my wrath away from the Children of Israel while he was zealous for my sake among them that I consumed not the Children of Israel in my Iealousie He had an extraordinary call to do that he was High-Priest but he went then upon jus zenorum So Elijah 1 Kings 18. 40. He took the Prophets of Baal and brought them down to the brook Kishon and slew them there There was an extraordinary call but we are all to be active in spreading and defending the Truth and promoting the purity of Gods worship and welfare of his People as far as our calling and places permit 2. It maketh us spare no cost yea it judgeth that best done for God which costs us most as David would not serve God with that which cost nothing 2 Sam. 24. 25. That 's worth nothing that cost nothing in Religion Iezebel she was zealous for Baal and maintained 400 of his Priests at her Table In the Primitive times they sold all things that they had and had all things common And the Israelites they offered so plentifully to the Tabernacle that Moses was fain to forbid them to put a stop because there was enough given for the Advancement of Gods worship Exod. 38. 8. And therefore certainly they are cold and have little zeal for God that love as the Corinthians did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Gospel without charges would be at no cost for Christ. This was Pauls case there the poor Saints of Macedonia which had but from hand to mouth they ministred to him and maintained him when he was at Corinth a rich and opulent Town Paul would depart from his right rather then prejudice the Gospel Therefore they that will be at no cost for Christ maintaining his Truth upholding his worship relieving his People have no zeal 3. It vents it self by holy Grief and Anger when any of these are violated 1. With holy Grief we should be touched and that to the quick with other mens sins when they neglect their duty pervert all that is right and honest and seem not to be concerned with the glory of God 1 Pet. 2. 7 8. It is said of Lot his Righteous Soul was vexed at the wickedness of the Sodomites and he vexed himself not with Sodoms injuries but with Sodoms impurities he could not redress the evils but he mourns for them So the Prophet Ieremiah for the stubbornness of the People Ier 13. 17. But if ye will not hear it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride and mine eye shall weep sore c. Though they would not hearken amend nor any way regard these things yet it grieved him exceedingly So you shall see the like of Ezra Ezra 10. 6. He mourned because of the Transgression of them that had been carried away The Transgression of Gods People was very grievous to him Thus we read of Ely 1 Sam. 4. 13. Ely sate by the way side watching for his heart trembled for the Ark of God The Glory of God was dear to him and when Religion is in danger God dishonoured it leaves a mighty impression upon the hearts of those that have a zeal and strong love to God 2. It vents it self by indignation and holy anger As Christ whipped the buyers and sellers out of the Temple and shewed his divine power therein Iohn 2. 15. And remember them O God that defile the Priesthood Nehem. 13. 29. And Exod. 32. 19. Meek Moses yet his anger waxed hot and he cast the Tables out of his hand And Ezra 9. 3. When I heard this thing I rent my Garment and my Mantle and pluckt off the hair of my Head and of my Beard and sate down Astonied Thus deeply are Gods Children affected with Gods publique dishonour though not occasioned by themselves but occasioned by others and this is to have a zeal for God 4. The Qualifications and Concomitants of this holy zeal I 'le name three 1. It must be accompanied with knowledge and discretion that is to say there must be a distinct knowledge of the Cause that we take up else we may be Factors for the Devils Kingdom when we think we are acting for God and be persecuting the Saints when we think we are destroying his Enemies It must be out of the knowledge of the Cause of the evil to be renounced and the good to be established There is a blind zeal Iohn 16. 2. Whosoever killeth you will think that he doth God good service The Pseudo-Christians the Literal Christians have a blind zeal against the serious Christians
is a complaint they will not learn after all these signs and wonders Matth. 16. 9. Do ye not understand neither remember the five loaves of the five thousand and how many baskets ye tock up Upon every Experience we should have high thoughts of Gods Power and All-sufficiency the great controversie between Christ and his Disciples was their not profiting in Faith 2. We see and know what God is willing to do for poor sinners he is not sparing of necessary supplies and comforts he hath been a present help we have no cause to believe the contrary 't is only distrust saith he will not 't is a suspicion and Jealousie without cause It may be for it hath been 1 Sam. 17. 36. The Lord hath delivered me c. Particular and special Confidence is not so usual now but we have no reason to be discouraged in the wayes of God though we cannot be absolutely confident yet we should not balk duty out of distrust and jealousie in such faintings take the Cordial of Experience Psal. 77. 10. And I said this is my infirmity but I will remember the years of the right hand of the most high III. Former Mercies are pledges of Future by giving God becometh our Debtor Matth. 6. 25. Is not the life more than meat and the body more than rayment If he gives Life he will give Food if he gives a Body he will give Rayment one Mercy is an earnest of another Rom. 8. 32. If he give us Christ he will give us all things if he give grace he will give glory if we have the first fruits Rom. 8. 23. we shall have the Harvest if we have the beginning Phil. 1. 6. we shall have the ending There are some dispensations that are but as a tendency to other Mercies given out in such a way as to invite hope IV. We are the more endeared to God by his own mercy and tender care of them Zech. 3. 2. is not this a brand plucked out of the burning The danger heightens the Mercy Use. To Reprove the People of God for their diffidence and distrust when after many experiences of God they can no more quiet their hearts concerning future events upon every new Trouble as much tormented and perplexed as if never known nor heard any thing of God before David 1 Sam. 27. I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul When God hath abundantly done enough to evidence his Power and Love unto us Psal. 78. 19 20 21. They said Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness c. When we are to credit God in another work as the Disciples after the Miracle of the Loaves when new Temptations assault us we should not be disheartned What were Gods motives before to help Because you were in Misery The same you may expect again Use 2. To Press you 1. To observe your Experiences and compare them with the Word All that God doth is full of Truth and Faithfulness Psal. 111. 7. The works of his hands are verity and Iudgment all his Commandments are sure exactly according to what he hath promised They certainly come to pass Especially observe your Experiences in your Troubles and Temptations what hath been your greatest Comfort and Support then 2. Begin to do so betimes long Experience is a great advantage most Christians are to be blamed that they begin so late to know God or to observe the Truth of his Word or that adjourn and put it off Fruits planted late are seldom Ripe and come to any thing When we have a long Journey to go we set forth early Begin with the Lord betimes if you would thrive in Faith the longer Experience you have had of God the more you will believe in him Psalm 22. 9 10. Thou art he that took me out of the Womb thou didst make me hope when I was upon my mothers Breast I was cast upon thee from the Womb thou art my God from my mothers Belly 3. Remember and improve Experiences They that know thy Name will put their Trust in thee Let not new Troubles startle us after we have found the Power and Goodness of God so ready for our help SERMON CLXXI. PSALM CXIX VER 153. Consider mine Affliction and deliver me for I do not forget thy Law IN this Verse observe First David's Petition Consider mine Affliction and deliver me Secondly His Argument for I do not forget thy Law First His Petition is double for Pity and Deliverance the one is preparative to the other 1. That God would consider his Case 2. Deliver him from the Danger into which he was cast by his Enemies Secondly His Reason is taken from his constant Obedience for I do not forget thy Law The Phrase is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and noteth 1. His Diligence he did carefully observe 2. His Constancy he never departed from the Obedience of Gods Word whatever Temptations he had to the contrary I shall give you some brief Notes Doctrine I. That Gods Choicest Servants in this World have their Afflictions David saith mine Affliction and others of Gods Children have their share of the Sorrows and Vexations of this World this will be so whether you consider them as Men or as Christians 1. As Men Iob 14. 1. Man that is born of a woman is of few dayes and full of trouble So Iob 5. 7. Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward And Gen. 47. 9. Few and evil have the dayes of the years of my life been It is well they are so few since so evil as our Relations and Comforts are multiplied so are the occasions of our Sorrow God never intended the World to be a place of our Rest but our Exercise it is a middle place between Heaven and Hell and hath somewhat of either In our passage to the other World we must look for it it is that we are born to many are born to great Honour and Estate but they have another portion goeth along with it they are born to Trouble ever since Sin entred into the World Punishment entred with it Vitam auspicatur a supplicio In Heaven full of Days full of Comforts but here it is otherwise few and full of Trouble Unusquisque nostrum cum nascitur ex hospitio hujus mundi excipitur initium sumit ex lacrymis Cyprian de pat Austin infans nondum loquitur jam prophetat Serm. 24. de verbis Apost 2. As Christians A man is no sooner brought home to God but he must expect to be hated by the World Ioh. 15. 19. If ye were of the world the world would love his own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Assaulted by Satan Luk. 22. 31. Simon Simon behold Satan hath desired to have you that he might sift you as wheat Chastened by the Lord himself for their Trial and Humiliation Heb. 12. 8. But if ye be without Chastisement whereof all are
fleshly Lusts in us which must be mortified more and more and deadned to the Pleasures and Profits and Honours of this World by remembring our great Obligations and Expectations from Christs death and Eternal Life For while any fleshly or Worldly Lust prevaileth with us and is the chief Principle in our hearts we cannot heartily serve God 4. An Heart Acted by Love 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live to themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again This is the active Principle which sets us a-work with cheerfulness Christ often intimateth that keeping the Commandments is the fruit of Love Ioh. 14. 15. all the expression of our Love to him is turned into that Channel Secondly I come now to the second Evidence and Testimony of his sincerity his Love to the Word I have loved them exceedingly Mark First His Affection I love thy Testimonies Secondly The Degree in the word Exceedingly First From his Affection Note Doctrine That 't is not enough to keep the Commandments but we must love them and that obedience they require from us This Love to the Law is often spoken of in this Psalm therefore there needeth the less to be said now Paul speaketh of this Love as well as David Rom. 7. 22. I delight in the law of God after the inward man The Reasons of the Point I. We can never thoroughly and constantly keep the Law without Love to it 'T is no easie thing to keep the Law of God there needeth much labour and striving Now where there is a sincere Love of the Law of God planted in the heart there will be this striving and endeavouring to Perform it None so sensible of the weight of sin none so active for Gods Glory there is nothing so difficult but Love maketh easie nihil amarum In a Word Labour and Toil proves a Pleasure and pain a matter of Delight where we Love the careful Mother bringeth forth the Child with Pain and Nurseth it up with Toil and Trouble is well enough pleased with her work and cheerful in it because of the Love she hath to the fruit of her Womb and her Child is dear to her Iacob's seven years Labour seemed to be a few daies for the Love he had to Rachel Gen. 29. 29. So God will have us serve him out of Love because nothing is grevious to Love 1 Ioh. 5. 3. It beareth all things suffereth all things Poverty Nakedness Bonds Injuries Labours never tyreth or groweth weary 2 Cor. 13. 7. II. Except we Obey because we Love our Obedience is not sincere and acceptatible 1 Cor 13. 1 2. Though I speak with the tongue of Men and of Angels and have not charity I am become as a sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal and though I have the gift of prophesie and understand all mysteries and all knowledge and though I have all faith so that I could remove mountains and have not charity I am nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Many are frighted into a course of Religion and go on from Duty to Duty out of a Fear of being Damned This is not true Obedience that is done servilely and by constraint These unwilling services which we perform to Christ out of urging of Conscience and fear of Wrath Ier. 2. 27. Which have turned the back unto me and not their face but in the time of their trouble they will say arise and save us They come to God not out of delight and choice but out of necessity and only then Hos. 5. 6. They that did not care for God at other times will then come with their Flocks and their Herds The Spirit of Bondage is clamourous for Duty as the Spirit of Adoption sweetly inclineth to it Many obey God no further than they are forced as Slaves whom nothing but Fear induceth to perform their Masters Command and so do not love the work nor do it for the Works sake III. The next Object to God fit for our Love is Gods Law 't is clear that God is primum amabile the first thing that is to be loved but what is the second surely that which hath most of God in it next after God his Word There is vestigium in the Creature there is Imago in his Testimonies 2 Cor. 3. 18. For we all with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord The fairest draught and print of God that can be taken his People have his Image but 't is overshadowed with weakness 't is but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the off-set of his Word 'T is the Word that maketh Saints There is the liveliest stamp and print of God his Testimonies lead not only to the knowledge of God but also the Fruition of him Whatsoever leadeth us to the Fruition of God is incomparably better than any other thing therefore if we Love God we must Love his Precepts Love them so as to keep them 'T is the greatest Testification of that Love we can shew to God Use. I. Is to shew us the Reason why so many Miscarry in the Profession of Godliness Many walk in the ways of God for a while but have no sound Love to them either By-ends or slavish Fears forced them into some Profession but they did not love Godliness as Godliness and therefore cannot hold out with God When a Man is Byassed and Poised by his heart to a thing you cannot easily divert and break his inclination that 's a rooted thing others were but forced and forced subjection will not alwayes hold Men are hoping they shall shake of an unpleasing task and where they obey from constraint and the Iron Yoke of Terror they will not long obey Use. II. To press us not only to keep God Testimonies but to love them Let me use some Arguments 1. From its Excellency to Love is more than to Do as to love sin is a greater Evil than to Commit it Gravius est peccatum diligere quam facere A Man may commit sin out of infirmity but he that loveth it sin reigneth in him Practice may be over-ruled a man may do evil that hateth it being overborn by the Violence of a Temptation as Paul saith of himself the evil that I hate that I do So a man may do good that hateth it being influenced by By-ends but our love is our own the genuine off-spring of the Soul 2. The Necessity of it unless we love our work we shall never be the more earnest in the performance of it Nature of its self is unwilling the heart hangeth off till it be poised by Love Reasons and Motives will not do it Rom. 8. 7. The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law The Commandments of God Cross our Will Profit and Pleasure therefore we need not only
Reasons with us but a strong inclination of heart to hold us to it else we shall be off and on with God Neh. 4. 6. The building went on because the people had a mind to the work Nothing else will do it but this 3. The Utility We shall have more comfort in the sincerity of our Affections than we can ever have in the perfection of our Actions The People of God that cannot plead the perfection of what they do plead the reality of their Love Iohn 21. 17. Lord thou knowest all things and knowest that I love thee 4. Ex debito We owe so much love to God that every thing that he requireth should be welcom to us for Gods sake they are his Testimonies therefore your souls should love them and bind them upon your hearts and the rather because we are to do our Duty not as Servants but as Friends Ioh. 15. 14. Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you not ye are my Servants Between Friends there is a perfect harmony and agreement in Mind and Will to do a thing for loves sake to his Friend this is an Act of Friendship Not by servile constraint but to keep them as they are his we are to do what Christ commandeth because he commandeth it and that is to do it in love Otherwise we break the Commands when we keep them Besides the outward Act there must be a ready inclination and delight in our Work Carnal Men the good they do they would not do that obedience is not worthy the name of obedience that is extorted from us men had rather live ungodly if they durst for fear of Punishment 'T is but a slight kind of Religion when Fear prevaileth more than Love they do somewhat God willeth but they had rather leave it undone a man is never firmly gained to God till he prefer Service before Liberty and loveth holiness as holiness But how must we shew this Love By two things by being Aweful and Cheerful Grieved when we offend him Glad when we please him Aweful in avoiding what he forbiddeth and Cheerful in performing what he requireth 1. Aweful you dare not break with God in any one point but are very chary and tender of the Commandments keep them as the Apple of his Eye Prov. 7. 2. that's offended with the least dust or keeping of Jewels Prov. 6. 24. Bind them continually upon thy heart tye them about thy neck as Iewels Choice of them 2. By being Cheerful Ready and Forward to every good Work Psal. 110. 3. A willing People You need not stand urging and pressing the inclination of their hearts swayeth them A Man is hardly kept from that he loveth 1 Ioh. 2. 5. He that keepeth my word in him is the love of God perfected Secondly The Degree I love them exceedingly Doctrine Our Love to the Law must be an exceeding Love First In the General It noteth the height and intensiveness of our Love not a cold Love as Children love things but are soon put out of the humour but an high strong Love that will not easily be broken or diverted such as doth deeply affect the heart Psalm 119. 97. Oh how I love thy Law 't is my meditation all the day We that are so coldly affected to spiritual things do not understand the force of these Expressions An high and strong Love will break forth into Meditation Operation make us sedulous and serious in obeying God Psal. 119. 48. My hands will I lift up to thy Commandments which I have loved 1 Ioh. 2. 5. He that keepeth my Word in him is the love of God perfected Lift up our Eyes to the receiving our Ears to the hearing our Hands to the doing of thy Commandments this argueth Love Secondly The Prevalency Not only high and strong but to a prevailing Degree 1. Such as prevaileth over things without us This is such a Love as is greater than our Love to all other things Wealth Honour Credit Estate yea Life it self For if any thing be loved above out duty to God it will soon prove a snare to us Matth. 13. 44. Sold all to buy the field wherein the treasure was hid All for the Pearl of price a Believer seeth such a treasure in the Word of God that he maketh no reckoning of any Wordly thing in comparison of it But will part with whatever is pleasant and profitable to him to enjoy it rather than be deprived of his Grace if any fleshly sensitive Good or Interest lyeth closer to the heart than the Word of God it will in time prevail so as to make Gods Will and Glory stoop to it rather than this Interest shall be Renounced or Contradicted There is no talking of serving God till you have this prevailing Love and hate all things in comparison of your Duty to God Luk. 14. 26. If any man hate not Father and Mother 2. Such as doth prevail over Carnal Desires and evil Affections within us if it be not a Love that doth eat up and devour our Lusts within us if the bent of your hearts be not more God than for Sin See Baxter page 273 274 275 to 279. in his directions about Conversion There will be Evil in the best and some Good in the worst the critical difference lieth in the prevalent bent of the heart when your dislike of sin is greater than your love then you may say Rom. 7. 20. It is not I but sin that dwelleth in me There must be a renewed self that prevaileth above corrupt self Well then Rest not in some General approbation of the ways of God or inclination to Good but this prevailing Affection that Justleth Sin out of the Soul SERM. CLXXXIII PSALM CXIX VER 168. I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies for all my ways are before thee DAvid still goeth on in his Plea he had spoken of his Faith and Love and now of his Fear We must 1. Labour for Faith to believe the Promises The Man of God beginneth there I have hoped for thy salvation 2. This Faith must work by Love that is his next step My soul loveth thy Testimonies exceedingly And 3. Love must breed in us a Reverend fear of Gods Majesty and a care to please him in all things This is the third part of the Plea mentioned in the Text I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies c. In which words First His Integrity is again asserted Secondly The Reason and Incouragement of it First His Integrity is Asserted I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies Where 't is Notable the Object of his Duty is expressed by two words Precepts and Testimonies Mandatis adjungit testimonia saith Calvin ut ostendat se non tantum agere de regala bene vivendi sed complecti totum salutis foedus He addeth the word Testimonies to that of Precepts to comprize the whole Covenant of Salvation Precepts signifyeth the Moral Law and Testimonies Doctrines of Grace Secondly The moving cause
of these things This is the Assurance of Faith spoken of Heb. 10. 22. I know I shall find this to be a Truth Men are Conscionable and faithful in keeping their Word much more God who can neither deceive nor be deceived 2. You are to delight in the promise though the performance be not yet nor like to be for a good while neither performed nor likely to be performed Heb. 11. 13. They saw them afar off and yet being perswaded of these things they embraced them And Ioh. 8. 56. Abraham saw my day and was glad You hold the Blessing by the root where you have the promise Heb. 6. 18. 3 You are to take the naked promise for a ground of your hope however it seem to be contradicted in the course of his providence 't is his Word you are to go by and stand by and according to which you must interpret all his Dispensations 'T is said Rom. 4. 18. That Abraham believed in hope against hope When Faith dependeth upon God naked Word then it standeth upon its own Basis and proper Legs every thing is strongest in its props and pillars which God and nature hath appointed for it He hangeth the Earth upon nothing in the midest of the Air but there is its place So Faith standeth fast upon his Word who is able to perform what he saith 4. This Faith must conquer our Fears and Cares and Troubles Psal. 112. 7. He shall not be afraid of evil tydings his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. And Psal. 56. 3 4. In God I will praise his word in God have I put my trust I will not fear what man can do unto me The force of Faith is seen in calming our passions and sinful Fears or else it is but a Notion and our Reverence and Respect to God will be weakened by it 5. When Faith hath done its work in the quieting of our own hearts you must glorifie God in your Carriage before others Ioh. 3. 33. Put to his Seal that God is true that is when we confirm others in the faith and belief of the promises by our joyfulness in all Conditions Patience and Contentedness under the Cross Diligence in Holiness Hope and Comfort in great streights You shall see Numb 20. 12. that God was angry with Moses and Aaron because they believed not to sanctifie him in the eyes of the Children of Israel We are not only to believe in God our selves but to sanctifie him in the eyes of others As the Thessalonians by receiving the Word in much Affliction much Assurance and Joy in the Holy Ghost were Examples to all that believed in Achaia 1 Thes. 1. 5 6 7. Thus we should do but how few do thus believe Some count these vain words and the Comforts thence deduced Fanatical illusions or Fantastical impressions nothing so ridiculous in the Worlds Eye as Trust and dependance on unseen Comforts Psal. 22. 8. He trusted on the Lord that he should deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him Ungodly Wits make the life of Faith a sport or matter of Laughter Some have more modesty but as little Faith they are all for the present World 2 Tim. 4. 9. present delights please them but present Temptations altogether unsettle them Heb. 12. 11. cannot bear present smart nor despise the present World Rom. 8. 19. any thing in hand is more than the greatest promise of better things to come they do not deal equally with God and man if man promise they reckon much of that but cannot tarry upon Gods security count his promise little worth they can trade with a Factor beyond Sea and trust all their estate in a mans hand whom they have never seen and yet the Word of the infallible God is of little respect with them The best build too weakly upon the promise as appeareth by the prevalency of our Cares and Fears Heb. 12. 4 5 6. If you did take God at his Word you would not be so soon Mated with every difficulty there would be more resolution in Trials more hardiness against ttoubles A man may boldly say the Lord is my helper I will not fear what man can do unto me If we had Faith to believe it it would more effectually quiet our hearts and minds in all our streights necessities and perplexities it would calm our desires and fears we would not desire the best things of the World nor fear the worst SERM. CLXXXVIII PSALM CXIX VER 174. I have longed for thy Salvation O Lord and thy law is my delight WE now come to the second Acceptation of the Word Salvation as it implyeth Eternal Salvation and so the Points are two Doctrine I. That we should vehemently Long and earnestly Wait for Eternal Life Doctrine II. That we should not only Long for Salvation but delight in the way which leadeth us to it For the first Point That Longing for Salvation is the Duty and Property of Gods Children The Reasons are taken from I. The Object of these Desires II. The Subject of these Desires III. The Use of these Desires IV. The State and Condition of the present World I. The Object The Object of Desire is Good considered as absent and not yet obtained Good All desire that it should be well with themselves This Desire is confused and general not the hundredth part Longeth after the true Good Psal. 4. 6. Who will shew us any good Some are carried by Ambition others by Covetousness others by Sensuality 1 Ioh. 2. 16. All that is in the World is either the lust of the Flesh the lust of the Eye or pride of Life And Isa. 53. 6. All we like sheep have gone astray we have every one turned to his own way As the Channel is cut so Corrupt Nature finds a vent But now Gods Salvation is the true good and ought to be desired and will be desired by all his Children It Importeth a freedom from all Misery and an Injoyment of all Good and a freedom from all Misery there sin and sorrow shall be no more and all Tears shall be wiped from our Eyes Rev. 21. 4. the blessed Spirits above have none of our cares and fears and sorrows here we are sighing and they are praising we sinning and they pleasing God we full of infirmities and they are perfect and without blemish And in the full enjoyment of all good Psal. 16. 11. At thy right hand is fulness of Ioy and in thy presence pleasures for evermore Psal. 17. 15. As for me I will behold thy face in Righteousness I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness Alas the preparations to this Estate in the World are far above the vain delights of the Flesh much more the pleasures there these the soul longeth for though they are thankful for a refreshment by the way yet they long to be at home II. Reason is taken from the Subject of these Desires and there we have 1. The Suitableness 2. The Experience 3. Our
Pressures 1. The Suitableness they are suited to this happiness wrought for this very thing 2 Cor. 5. 5. Every thing hath a propension to the place for which God framed it 't is the Wisdom of God to put all things in their proper places as every Creature is placed in that element which is suitable and answerable to its Composition and Frame as Fishes in Water Fowles in the Air. Gods Children are framed for this very thing therefore have an inclination and a tendency thither As Heaven is prepared for them so in some measure they for it Rom. 9. 24. aforehand prepared unto Glory And Col. 1. 12. Made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light They grow more dead every day to the Interests and Concernments of the Animal Life and have a greater agreeableness to this happiness 2. Experience Rom. 8. 23. We that have the first fruits of the Spirit groan wit hin our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the redemption of our body A Christian here is unsatisfied and longeth for a better and purer state of Bliss and Immortality Light Life Peace Joy one dram of Grace is more precious than all the World but yet it setteth them a longing for more the first fruits sheweth us what the Harvest will be and a tast what the Feast will prove here we get a little knowledge of God a sight of him in the Ordinances a Twi-light discovery of Christ a Look through the Lattice Cant. 2. 9. a little Glance of his Face when neither doth he let the Believers in to him nor doth he come out to them this Glance maketh them long for more So that in effect they send up the same Message to Christ which his Mother and Brethren did because of the press thy mother and thy brethren stand without desiring to see thee Tell him thou standest here without but desirest to see him So for the Communion we have with Christ 't is but a tast 1 Pet. 2. 3. If so be ye have tasted the Lord is gracious but that tast is very ravishing and delightful Here we get a little from him in an Ordinance but that little is as much as we can hold but there he is all in all here our holiness is not perfect the seed of God remaineth in us but there it groweth up to perfection as every spark of Fire tendeth to the Element of Fire 3. Our Pressures and the Miseries of the present Life 2 Cor. 5. 4. Being burdened we groan We are pressed under an heavy weight burdened both with Sin and Misery and both set us a groaning and a longing as men in a Tempest would fain be set ashoar as soon as they can 1. Sin to a waking Conscience and a tender Gracious Heart is one of the greatest burdens that can be felt Rom. 7. 24. Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death If any had cause to complain of Afflictions Paul much more he was Whipped Imprisoned Stoned in perils by Land and Sea but Afflictions did not sit so close to him as sins the body of Death was his greatest burden and therefore did he long for Deliverance If others go away silently under their load the Children of God cannot as light and love increaseth so sin groweth a greater burden to us They cannot get rid of this cursed inmate and therefore are longing for their final Estate when sin shall gaspe its last they long for the parting day when by putting off the Flesh they shall put off sin and dwell with God 2. Miseries the Children of God have not divested themselves of the feelings of Nature are not grown sensless as stocks and stones The Apostle telleth us Rom. 8. 20 21 22. that the whole Creation groaneth because 't is under Misery and Vanity 'T is a groaning World and Gods Children bear a part of the Consort they groan and desire earnestly their full Deliverance Few and evil are the days of the years of my Pilgrimage said holy Iacob Gen. 47. 9. Our dayes are Evil therefore 't is well they are but few that in this Shipwrack of mans Felicity we can see Banks and Shores and a landing place where we may be safe here is our Travail but there is our repose we would sleep too much here and take up our rest if sometimes we did not meet with Thorns in our bed III. Reason The End and Use of this Longing and Desiring 1. 'T is an earnest Desire it maketh us industrious and stirreth up and keepeth up our endeavours after another World Phil. 3. 20 21. But our Conversation is in heaven from whence we look for a Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself Where there is a lively expectation there men drive on a Trade for another Country Desire is the Vigorous bent of the Soul and so beareth us out under all the difficulties of Obedience If we do not desire we will not labour nor seek it in the first place and if our desires be weak and feeble they are controled by every Lust abated upon every difficulty whatever gets your heart that will command your endeavours for as a mans desire is so is he 2. To make us Constant notwithstanding Troubles Reproaches Persecutions Matth 11. 12. The violent take it by force They will have no nay they must have it whatever it cost them though sore Troubles and Persecutions yet if we may get Heaven and Glory at last 't is enough but where a thing is coldly and carelesly desired every thing puts us out of the humour IV. The State and Condition of the present World 't is called Gal. 1. 4. The present World The Pleasures of it are meer dreams and shadows and the Evils of it are many and real Gods Children are Pilgrimes here and hardly get leave to pass thorough as Israel could not get leave to pass through Edom Sometimes they meet with such bitter and grievous Persecutions which make them weary of their lives as Elijah requested for himself that he might die 1 King 9. 4. or as the Spirits of the Israelites were filled with Anguish because of their hard task Masters God will give his People Rest hereafter but before the Rest cometh they are sorely Troubled 1 Thes. 1. 6 7. And ye became followers of us and of the Lord having received the word in much Affliction with joy of the Holy Ghost so that ye were ensamples to all that believe in Macedonia and Achaia Nay the Company that we go with to Heaven are apt to fall out by the way and to deal perversly one with another Unministering Unchurching Unchristianing one another Impaling inclosing the Common Salvation and justleing one another out of the way to Heaven so that the Church which should be Terrible like an Army with Banners Marching to
Heaven in order in one whole Body is like an Army in Rout and most are forced to get home in straggling Parties Now every tender Soul should Long for Gods Salvation to get up to that Counsel of Souls who with perfect Harmony are Lauding and Praising God for evermore Heb. 12. 23. Use. I. Is to reprove them that are loth to leave this woful Life and do not long and prepare for a better God driveth us out of the World as he did Lot out of Sodom yet we are loth to depart as if it were better to be Miserable apart from God and Christ then happy with them Surely they are far from the Spirit of true Christians who would live alwayes here are at home in the World and cannot endure to think of a remove There are two Causes of this 1. An Unmortifyed Heart 2. An Unsettled Conscience 1. An Unmortified Heart they are not yet weaned from the World their Hearts are set upon satisfying the Vile Lusts of the Body carry it as if their Portion lay in this World Psal. 17. 14. sucking yet upon the Worlds Dugg they have no longing nor desire for that Happiness and Glory which God hath provided for them that love him they desire no other Portion than what they have in hand 2. And the other cause is an Unsettled Conscience some fear the state of the other World rather than desire it and long for it there are two degrees notknowing for certain it shall go well with us and not knowing for certain but that it shall go ill with us both suppress this desire especially the latter Use. II. Is to Rowse up our languid and cold Affections that they may more earnestly be carryed out after heavenly things that we may seek after them with more Fervency and Constancy and Self-denial The Motives to press us are these 1. God giveth Heaven to none but to those that Look and Long for it Men may go to Hell against their Wills but none go to Heaven against their Wills In a Punishment there is a force offered to us but not in a Reward We suffer what we would not as Christ saith to Peter another shall gird thee and carry thee whither thou wouldst not Ioh. 21. 18. But happiness must be imbraced pursued and sought after Well then let the concernments of the other World more take up our Hearts and Minds and stand as at heavens Gate expecting when God will open the door and call you in Christ will appear to them that look for him Heb. 9. 28. 2. The Children of God Long to see God in his Ordinances Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of God all the dayes of my Life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple And Psal. 42. 2. My Soul thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appear before God Psal. 63. 1 2. O God thou art my God early will I seek thee my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is to see thy power and thy glory so as I have seen thee in the Sanctuary Now if there be so Great and Longing a desire to see the glory of the Lord in a Glass wherein so little of his Glory is seen with any comfort and satisfaction how much more to see him immediately face to face if a Glimpse be so comfortable what will the immediate Vision of God then be surely if this be Salvation every one of us should long for this Salvation 3. If it be not worth our Desire 't is little worth the Estate being so excellent such a compleat Redemption from all our Troubles so perfect and so full an happiness in Body and Soul will not you send a groan or an hearty Act of Volition after it 't is great ingratitude that when Christ hath procured a great state of blessedness for us at a very dear rate we should value it no more he procured it by a life of Labour and Sorrow and the Pangs of a bitter Cursed death and when all is done we little regard it surely if we choose it for our happiness there will be longing and looking for it No man will fly from his own happiness a mans heart will be where his Treasure is Math. 6. 21. if you prize it you will sigh and groan after it the Apostle saith Phil. 1. 23. I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you count it better to be there than else where you will be desiring to be there and longing to be there for we are always longing for that which is better chiefly for that which is best of all there is the best estate the best work the best company all is better if you count it so it will be no difficult thing to bring you earnestly to desire it 4. All the Ordinances serve to stir up this longing after Heaven and to awaken these desires in us the Word is our Charter for Heaven or Gods Testament wherein this rich Legacy is bequeathed to us that every time we Read it or Hear it or Meditate upon it we may get a step higher and our Hearts more drawn out after Heavenly things In Prayer whether in Company or Alone 't is but to raise and act these heavenly Desires there we groan and long for Gods Salvation In the Lords Supper we come solemnly to put our selves in mind of the new Wine we shall drink in our Fathers Kingdom Matth. 26. 29. to put a new heavenly Relish upon our Hearts 5. The Imperfection of our present Estate We are now imperfect and streightened like a Fish in a Pail or small vessel of Water which cannot keep it alive it would fain be in the Ocean or swiming in the broad and large Rivers So we are pent up cannot do what we would there is a larger Estate when filled up with all the fulness of God that Holiness we have now maketh us look for it and long for it and surely Holiness was never designed for our Torment 6. We are hastning into the other World apace and therefore we more desire it Natural motion is in principio tardior in sine velecior the nearer to fruition the more impatient of the want of it When a Man is drawing home after a long Journey every Mile is as tedious as two We are drawing nigh to the other World let us leave this willingly not by force let not Trouble chase us out of it but Love and Desire draw us out of it God doth loosen our Roots by little and little that we may now be sit for a Remove the Pins of our Tabernacle are taken down insensibly and by leisurely Degrees Now as fast as we are going out of this World we should be going into another the inner Man Renewed day by day