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A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

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Heart was far from God being drawn away with the sin of Covetousnesse See Joh. 13. 27. So Simon Magus drew neer to God outwardly by receiving the Sacrament of Baptism and by making some outward profession of Religion but his heart was not right in the sight of God but in the gall of bitterness c. See Acts 8. 12 21. See Matth. 21. 28. the Parable of the two sons one whereof said he would go work in the Vineyard but went not Reas 1 Reas 1. The chief care of Hypocrites is to please Men and to win credit and praise from Men not to please God or to approve themselves to Him therefore they are carefull to seem Religious in the outward Duties of God's worship but no conscience do they make of the inward and spirituall worship of the heart whereof God alone taketh notice Thus the Pharisees did all religious Duties to be seen and approved of Men as our Saviour sheweth Matth. 6. which made them to rest onely in outward Duties never giving their hearts to God Luke 16. 15. Ye are they which justifie your Selves before men but God knoweth your hearts q. d. He knoweth that your hearts are not upright before him but Hypocriticall and Wicked Reas 2 Reas 2. They think God is pleased with outward Service of it self therefore they rest in that alone Use 1 Use 1. See then that outward conformity in religious Duties of God's worship is not enough to make one a good Christian or to prove him to be such a one for gross Hypocrites such as the Scribes and Pharisees were may be forward in outward Duties of God's Worship they may draw near to God with their bodies and outward man they may come to the Church hear the Word receive the Sacraments pray sing Psalms c. and yet be gross Hypocrites having hearts far removed from God Yea which is more many that have been forward in outward duties of God's Worship shall at the last day be shut out of God's Kingdom See Mat. 7. 22. Vse 2 Use 2. See by this how many Hypocriticall Pharisaicall Worshippers of God there are in these our times 1. Papists whose Religion and Worshipping of God is meerly external consisting onely in outward Rites Ceremonies and Gestures performed with the Body as in crossing themselves in outward Numbring of Prayers upon Beads in Kneeling before Images in Hearing the Masse c. In Praying in an unknown Tongue But as for the inward spirituall Worship of God they regard it not c. 2. Many formal Protestants who content themselves with outward performance of religious duties of God's Worship as outward hearing Prayer receiving Sacraments c. in the mean time making no Conscience of giving God the spiritual Worship of the heart 3. Many ignorant People who think they serve God very well if they do but say over the words of2 the Lord's Prayer the Creed c. though without all Understanding and Affection What are all these but Pharisaical Worshippers drawing near to God with their bodies when their Souls and Spirits are far removed from him Use 3 Vse 3. This admonisheth us all to take heed we be not like Hypocrites and Pharisees contenting our selves with bare outward performance of Duties of God's Worship with-holding the inward Service of our Hearts and Spirits from him Rest not in outward formal Devotion and serving of God with the body as if this were enough or as much as God requireth and looketh for but look we joyn therewith the inward spiritual Worship of our Hearts and Souls Hebr. 10. 22. Let us draw neer with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evill Conscience c. Rom. 1. 9. Whom I serve with my Spirit c. 1 Cor. 14. 15. I will pray and sing with spirit c. Ephes 5. 19. Make melody in hearts c. So David Psal 103. 1. and Mary Luke 1. Motives hereunto 1. God is a Spirit and therefore requireth such spiritual Worship as is suitable to his Nature Joh. 4. 24. and Ver. 23. The Father seeketh such to worship him Prov. 23. 26. My Son give me thy Heart Though the Lord require the Service of the whole Man yet principally that of the Heart 2. The Law of God in which his Worship is commanded is a spiritual Law binding the inner man as well as the outward to obey and serve God Rom. 7. 14. 3. God hath created and Christ hath redeemed our whole Man our Souls as well as bodies therefore serve him in both 1 Cor. 6. 4. All outward Worship without inward and spiritual is so far from pleasing God that it is hateful and abominable unto him It is loathsom and stinking in his Nostrils like Cain's Sacrifice and those of the Jews Isa 1. As in time of the Law if any offered for Sacrifice any Beast that was lame or blind it was odious to God so now if any offer this lame Service of the outward man without inward it is loathsom to God Mark 7. 7. But they worship me in vain c. Feb. 24. 1621. VVEE have heard that our Saviour in his Answer to the malicious Cavil of the Scribes and Pharisees against his Disciples doth reprove and convince them by the Authority and Testimony of the Prophet Esay where we have three things to consider 1. The manner of alledging that Testimony with a Preface commending it as a fit Testimony to convince them Well hath Esaias c. 2. The Testimony it self or matter and substance of it in these words This People honoureth me with lips c. 3. The Application of it unto the Scribes and Pharisees for the plain and direct convincing of them Ver. 8. Of the manner of alledging the Testimony I have spoken the last Sabbath and in part of the Testimony which as I shewed you contains in it a sharp Censure or Reproof which the Prophet passeth upon the Jews of his time for two sins 1. Their gross Hypocrisy in the Service of God Honouring him with lips c. 2. Their Superstition and Will-Worship in that they worshipped God after their own Traditions and not after the Rule of his Word Of the former sin I have spoken Now to speak of the latter in these words But they worship me in vain c. Where consider these two things 1. The sin reproved or censured Superstition and Will-worship in these words They worship me teaching for Doctrines the Commandments of men 2. The Amplification of this their Superstitious Worship by the Adjunct or Property of it in that it was a vain and unprofitable kind of Worship In vain do they worship me Touching their sin of Superstition it was two-fold 1. In Doctrine They taught the Precepts of men for Doctrines 2. In Life and Practise They worshipped God according to those Precepts of men which they taught Before I speak of these particulars it is needful to answer a doubt which may arise touching the difference between the words
he clo●eth and excuseth his sin of beheading John Matth. 23. 14. The Scribes and Pharisees devoured Widows houses under pretence of long prayers So Mark 7. 11. under pretence of keeping an unlawful oath they refused to relieve and help Natural Parents So Balaam Numb 22. 23. Chap. under colour of Religion cursed the people of God for hire So the Papists at this day under pretence of Religion murder Princes c. So under pretence of holiness they forbid Priests marriage and so force some to live in fornication Use Use Take heed of this grosse hypocrisie in practising sin under colour of Religion or holines● This doth exceedingly aggravate any sin when Religion is abused as a cloak or excuse for it Dissembled Holinesse is double Iniquity and shall have double Punishment See Matth. 23. 14. Observ 2 Observ 2. If Herod made such scruple of an unlawful Oath much more should we of a lawful Oath c. See Chap. 7. Ver. 11. Observ 3 Observ 3. Hypocrites do make scruple of small matters and in the mean time make no conscience of grosse and haynous sins Herod makes scruple of breaking his Oath which was not onely lawfull but necessary for him to do but he makes no conscience of murdering the innocent Matth. 23. 23. The Scribes and Pharisees made scruple of paying Tythe Mint Annise and Cummin though some think they had no Commandment in the Law of God for such Tythes but onely their own tradition See Drusius on the place but they neglected the weighty matters of the Law of God as Judgment Mercy and Faith They strained at a Gnatt and swallowed a Camell So also they made scruple of eating with unwashen hands but no conscience of the grosse sins of hypocrisie oppression covetousnesse c. Use Use Let this hypocrisie be far from us to make sins of those which are no sins but things lawfull or indifferent when in the mean time we make no sins of those which are foul and enormous To make scruple of things lawful is to be just over-much and to make no scruple of grosse sins this is to be wicked over-much both which are condemned by Solomon Eccles 7. 16. Therefore on the other side in things lawful and indifferent let us use our liberty without scandal to others but in the sins condemned in the Word of God here let us make conscience to hate and refrain them here we cannot be too scrupulous or precise and strict though they be never so small sins in comparison c. How much more conscience is to be made of greater c. Observ 4 Observ 4. Here also we see how unlawful and hurtful it is to keep or perform unlawful Vows or Promises though confirmed by oath Herod's keeping his unlawful oath and promise is the cause of the murder of John Baptist Such Oaths and Vows are better broken then kept As it is a sin to make them so a double sin to keep them An oath must not be a bond to tye us to sin c. So much of the first Motive moving Herod to grant the Petition of the Damsel which was the respect he had to his Oath Now followeth the second which was the respect he had to those that sate at Table with him Observ 1 Observ 1. Hypocrites and wicked men are more careful to please men and to procure favour from them than to please God and to be approved of him So Herod here So the Scribes and Pharisees did all their works to be seen of men and that they might be approved of men not regarding in the mean time to approve themselves unto God See Matth. 6. and Matth. 23. So the wicked and unbelieving Jews sought honour one from another and did not seek the honour that cometh of God only Joh. 5. 44. So Joh. 12. 42. those Rulers believed Christ to be the Messiah yet durst not confesse him for they loved the praise of men more than the praise of God Use Vse Let it not be so with us but on the contrary let us look to this in the first place That we glorifie and please God by keeping a good conscience in all our wayes and then in the next place to seek the favour and approbation of men only so far as it may stand with the pleasing of God Otherwise if we cannot please men but with the displeasing of God better in this case to displease all men in the world than to sin against God Here we must not regard the displeasure of men when by pleasing of men we are in danger to offend and displease God Therefore in all our wayes look first and chiefly to this that we approve our selves to God seeking his favour and allowance of all that we do who must be our Judge to whom we must one day give account of all our wayes Men shall not be our Judges c. Observ 2 Observ 2. See here also how dangerous a thing it is to be given to ambition and desire of vain-glory and of pleasing men This causeth men to yield to the committing of great and grievous sins and that sometimes even against their own knowledg and conscience Thus Herod being desirous of vain-glory and of the praise and commendation of his Nobles which sate with him at his banquet yieldeth to put John to death contrary to the light of his own conscience So that other Herod Act. 12. 3. having first killed James with the sword because he saw it pleased the Jews he proceeded to take Peter also No doubt but his conscience told him it was a sin to put to death two such innocent and holy persons yet he was so carried away with ambition and desire of the Jews favour and commendation that he yielded to do it even against his Conscience So Felix Act. 24. 27. willing to shew the Jews a pleasure left Paul bound when he went out of his Office It is most likely that his conscience told him that Paul was wrongfully imprisoned and yet he was so ambitious of the Jews favour that to please them he left him in prison when he might have delivered him Use Use Beware then of this ambitious seeking to please men and to procure favour and credit with them lest it draw us to the committing of grievous sins against God and even against the light and testimony of our conscience Do we not see in daily experience how this ambition and desire of mens favour and of credit and reputation in the world carrieth men head long into fearful sins against their Conscience Are there not many who to procure favour and credit with men stick not to make shipwrack of a good conscience before God Yea for the pleasing of men especially of great men many stick not to dishonour God and wound their own Consciences with fearful sins They will lye swear dissemble deal falsly flatter yea they will yield to any sin and practise any wickedness and all to this end that they may get favour and credit
and the three next following he proveth the Crime of which he accused them by an example or instance which he giveth of two particular precepts of the Word of God which they rejected and disannulled by their Tradition Where 1. Our Saviour layeth down or alledgeth the precepts of the Word of God which he chargeth them to abrogate Ver. 10. 2. He layeth down their contrary unwritten Tradition which they opposed against the written Word Ver. 11 12 13. Where he shews how they abrogate God's Word by that Tradition Touching the alledging of the precepts of the written Word of God in which our Saviour instanceth we are to consider two things 1. The manner of alledging them viz. the name of Moses the Pen-man of those Books of Scripture out of which the precepts are cited Moses said c. 2. The matter and substance of the precepts which are two in number The first Being a precept of the Morall Law even the Words of the fifth Commandement recorded Exod. 20. 12. Deut. 5. 16. Honour thy Father and thy Mother The second Being a precept or Ordinance of the Judiciall Law which was the Law of punishments for Breakers of the Morall Law enjoyning the penalty of Death to be inflicted on such Children as did break the fifth Commandement and that in a high degree by cursing or speaking evil of their Patrents in these words Whosoever shall speak evil c. which Judiciall Law is found written Exod. 21. 17. and Levit. 20. 9. First Of the manner of alledging these precepts of the Law of God Quest Quest Where did he say it Answ Answ In his written Books before mentioned Moses said So saith our Evangelist here Yet Matthew 15. 4. it is said God Commanded c. The reason is because Moses was imployed of God as his Instrument and Secretary in writing of the Law and whatsoever he wrote and in writing delivered to the Church in those Books of his before mentioned he wrote it by Authority received from God himself and that immediately St. Mark ascribeth that to Moses which St. Mathew attributeth to God that he might commend to the Church the Divine Authority of the Books of Moses Observ Observ Here take notice of the Divine Authority of the Books of Holy Scripture that though they were written by Men as Instruments imployed of God in that service yet they contain no other but the Divine and Heavenly Doctrine of God himself So that what Moses wrote in his five Books which we have it is the Doctrine and Writing of God Hos 8. 12. I have written to him that is to Ephraim the great things of my Law c. So all that is written in the rest of the sacred Books of the Old and New Testament is no other but the very Word and Doctrine of God himself Acts 1. 16. The Holy Ghost spake by the mouth of David in the Book of Psalms The reason is because all the Pen-men of Scripture wrote those Books of Scripture by immediate extraordinary direction and assistance of the Spirit of God instructing them infallibly both in the matter and manner of Writing 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God c. 2 Pet. 1. 21. Prophecy came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Quest Quest. How to know and be assured that the Scriptures were written by immediate Divine inspiration and consequently that they contain the Doctrine and the Word of God himself Answ Answ The main and principall means to be assured hereof is by the inward infallible testimony of the Holy Ghost in the consciences of Men especially of the Elect of God when they read the Scriptures or hear them read or preached This inward testimony of the Spirit is the onely means abled undoubtedly to perswade the conscience that the Scriptures are the Word of God If no man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12. 3. Then much less can any come undoubtedly to be perswaded that the whole Scripture is the Word of God but by inward testimony of the Spirit sealing it to his heart Now this Testimony is especially found and felt in those that do unfeignedly desire and endeavour to obey the Will of God revealed in his Word Joh. 7. 17. If any man will do his Will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God c. But besides this inward testimony of the Spirit there are also sundry other proofs and evidences which may be drawn from the Scriptures themselves which are sufficient to convince the conscience of any not willfully blind that the Doctrine of the Scripture is the Word of God so as they cannot in conscience deny it though otherwise they have not Grace to yield obedience to it as the Word of God I will not speak of all but of some of the principall of those evidences by which our consciences may be settled in the truth of this weighty Point and by which we may be armed against profane Atheists and all that deny or call in question the authority of the Scriptures The proofs are these which I will but briefly touch 1. The Power and Efficacy of the Scriptures in working on the inward Souls and Consciences of men both to humble them in the sight and sense of their sins and to raise them up and comfort them being humbled No Writings or Doctrine of Man hath like Power Hebr. 4. 12. The Word of God is quick and powerfull c. See also 1 Cor. 14. 25. 2. The Antiquity of the Scriptures for the Books of Moses are more antient then any humane Writings setting down the Originall and first History of things done from the beginning of the World which other Writers either knew not at all or borrowed them from Moses and corrupted them with many Fables and untruths 3. The wonderfull Harmony and Consent that is found to be in the Books of Scripture among themselves though they were Written by sundry persons at sundry times and in different Ages of the World And though there be some shew of difference or contrariety in words sometimes yet all such places as seem to differ and to be at jarr are sufficiently reconciled by those of the Church who have laboured therein 4. The fulfilling of the Prophesies found in Scripture in their due and appointed times even unto this very Age in which we live For example The Israelites going into Aegypt and being delivered thence again and coming into Canaan The seventy years Captivity of the Jews and their deliverance by Cyrus who is also named by the Prophet above a hundred years before he was born Isa 45. 1. So also the time and manner of Christ's coming in the Flesh the calling of the Gentiles destruction of Hierusalem revealing of Antichrists c. All these and many other things foretold in Scripture are already fulfilled and other things are daily more
man whose very mercies are cruell Prov. 12. 10. On the contrary labour as the Elect of God to put on bowels of mercy c. Col. 3. 12. By this we resemble God Luke 6. 36. Be mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull By this also we resemble God's Children who are said to be mercifull men Esay 57. 1. Observ 4 Observ 4. That it is a most lamentable and grievous misery and affliction for any to have their Bodies given up of God unto the Power and Tyranny of the Devil either to be possessed by him or to be afflicted and tormented or any way abused by him This we may see here in the example of this Party who was possessed with the Devil and given up into his hands his case was most wretched and lamentable It was a grievous affliction to have his body possessed by the Devil that foul Spirit though he had but onely entred into him at time and had not stirred or moved in him to torment him or put him to any pain but that the Devil being in him should rent and tear his body racking and torturing it so grievously That with the very extremity of pain He fomed at the mouth yea that in his fits he threw him to the Ground and made him lye and wallow there foming and gnashing with his teeth and did pine and wast away as in a consumption c. what a lamentable case was this what a pittifull and rufull spectacle to behold And yet this was not all for the Devil also used in his fits to cast him by violence oftentimes into the fire and oftentimes into the Wa-ter to destroy him as is said afterward Neither was this all for besides all this before mentioned the Devil had stricken him both dumb and deaf so as he could neither speak to make known his own misery nor hear o●hers speak to him for his comfort which did exceedingly aggravate his misery And last of all this also did not a little augment the same that he had been so long a time in this wofull distresse even from his Childhood or Infancy as some read it ver 21. he being now a youth or young man of some age or years as is probable so that it is like he was for sundry years in this miserable case So that this example alone is enough if there were no other in all the Scripture to shew to us what a lamentable and grievous misery it is for any to have their Bodies given up of God though but for a time into the power of the Devil to be abused by him But the same may further appear to us by other like examples of such as were possessed in our Saviour's time See before chap. 5. 1 c. See it also in Job's example who though he were not possessed by the Devil yet so soon as God did but give Satan leave to strike him in his Body we see into what a lamentable case he soon brought him smiting him all over with boiles from the sole of the Foot to the crown of his Head So as Job was fain to sit down among the ashes and to scrape himself with a potsheard Job 2. 7 8. Use 1 Vse 1. See the hainousness grievousness of sin how offensive and odious it is to God in that it hath made our Bodies lyable and subject to the Devils Power and Tyranny to be so abused racked and tortured in this lamentable sort Sin is the Original cause and fountain of all this misery to which the Bodies of men are sub●ect in this Life by reason of Satan's Power and Tyranny over them whensoever the Lord doth give up the bodies of any into his Power This wofull misery is come upon mankind as a just punishment for sin and were it not for sin the Devil should never have had any such power or leave from God either to enter into mens Bodies by possession or any other way to afflict and torment them in thi● lamentable manner as he did here unto this child or young man that was possessed This being so it must work and increase in us more and more a true hatred and detestation of all sin both in our selves and others especially in our selves and cause us to shew the same by our care to refrain sin and all occasions of it c. If we have cause to abhorr the Devil as our most malicious and cruel Enemy then much more to detest sin as the cause of all his enmity and of all that Power and Tyranny which the Lord permitteth him to have over mens bodies at any time Use 2 Use 2. See again what cause for us to be thankful unto God for his unspeakable mercy in not giving up our bodies or the bodies of our Children or others which are dear to us into the hands of the Devil to be abused afflicted or tormented by him in such woful and pitiful manner as this party was Especially if we consider the desert of our sins that for them God might most justly deliver up our bodies to Satan's power in this fearfull manner c. How then are we bound to God for not doing this how are we to blesse his Name for that he doth rather correct us with his own hand by bodily Sicknesse or otherwise than give us up into the Devil's hands to be punished c. As it is a token of a fathers love to his child and care of his good that he doth not appoint some cruel or hard-hearted servant to correct his son for his fault but he doth it with his own hands c. So here c. Use 3 Use 3. See also what cause there is for us daily to commit our selves and those that belong unto us to God's special protection praying him to keep us and ours not onely in our Souls but in our bodies from the Power of Satan and not to give up our bodies into his hands to be abused at his Will and Pleasure Seeing it is so grievous an affliction and misery to have our bodies subjected under the Devil's Power pray him to keep us from this wretched misery and not lay this heavy affliction upon us though our sins deserve it Use 4 Use 4. Hence gather That it is a far more grievous misery for any to be in spiritual sub●ection and bondage under the Power of Satan in respect of their Souls and Consciences This is far a more lamentable case than to be in bodily subjection to the Devil's Power And yet thus it is with all such as live in sin and in their natural estate they are under the Power of Satan they are spiritually possessed of him in their Hearts and Consciences he holdeth them at his Will as in a snare 2 Tim. 2. ult He is entred into them as once he entred into the heart of Judas and he worketh in them effectually by his wicked Suggestions and Temptations drawing them to sin and holding them under the Power of it and consequently under the
wrath and curse of God He deals with the Souls and Consciences of such as he did here with the body of this possessed young man He carries them headlong to the practice of sin and so doth cast their Souls into the fire of Hell even as he did violently throw the body of this party into the Fire and into the Water And as he did re●● and tear the body of this party with grievous pains causing him to fome and gnash his teeth c. So doth he rack and torment the Consciences of wicked men with inward gripings and terrours and makes their Consciences to fome and gnash within them as it were And as he did deprive this party of his bodily senses striking him both dumb and deaf So doth he bereave the wicked of their spiritual senses striking them with spirituall dumbness and deafness c. so as they can neither pray nor speak a word to God's Glory or Edification of others nor yet hear God speak unto them by his Word as they ought c. See then the wofull misery of all such as are thus spiritually possessed of Satan and under his Power in their Souls and Consciences which should move all such to labour for a true feeling of this their own lamentable condition and to use all means speedily to be delivered from this spirituall Power of Satan especially to come duly to the publike Ministery of the Word which is the ordinary means to cast down the holds of sin in them and to deliver them from the Power of Satan c. And it should also move us to pitty and pray for such If we should see one bodily possessed by the Devil and so tormented as this party was would not our bowels yearn Much more then c. See before chap. 5. 1 c. Mark 9. 18. And I spake to thy Disciples that they should cast him out and they could not March 4. 1626. HItherto of the first Argument or Motive used by the father of this possessed young man to move our Saviour to shew mercy on him taken from the lamentable misery in which he was Now follows the second Motive from the unability of the Disciples to cast the Devil out of him notwithstanding that he had sought unto them to do it I spake to thy Disciples The reason why he first sought to the Disciples was because Christ himself was at that time absent And they could not Hence it is probable That they did attempt the casting out of the Devil but could not do it c. The cause of this unability in the Disciples was partly their own Weakness of Faith Matth. 17. 20. and partly the Unbelief of the Father and of the Nation of Jews especially of the Scribes and Pharisees in the following Verse Observ 1 Observ 1. That although the Apostles of Christ had the extraordinary Gift and Power of working Miracles conferred on them by Christ for the sealing of their Doctrine as we heard before Chap. 6. 7. yet they could not exercise this Power at all times whensoever they would but then onely when it was expedient when it made for God's Glory and Edification of the People and when they were thereunto moved by special instinct Sometimes it was not expedient neither did it make for God's Glory that they should exercise the Power and Gift of Miracles and sometimes also they were hindred by their own Unbelief or by the Unbelief of others from working those Miracles which they attempted as at this time they were as appeareth Matth. 17. 20. and in this Chapter afterward Hence also we may gather by the way That this Gift of working Miracles was not any Power or Vertue inherent in their own Persons for then they migh● have exercised it at all times when they would but it was the divine Power of God and of Christ himself which did work in them and by them as by Instruments So Peter professeth plainly Act. 3. 12. Why look ye on us as though by our own Power we had made this man to walk c. But ver 16. The Name of Christ had made this man strong c. See before Chap. 6. 7. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples were hindred and disabled by their own Unbelief and Weakness of Faith that they could not at this time work this Miracle in casting the Devil out of the possessed party we learn that Unbelief or Weakness of Faith is a sin very hurtful and dangerous to the true Saints and Servants of God hindring and depriving them of most excellent priviledges and benefits which otherwise they might enjoy So here the Disciples by their Unbelief deprived themselves for a time of that rare and extraordinary gift of working Miracles utterly disabling themselves for the exercise thereof More particularly the Saints of God do by their Unbelief hinder and deprive themselves of two sorts of benefits or priviledges 1. Of inward and spiritual priviledges which concern the good of their Souls and the life to come as of the comfortable feeling of God's favour and of that measure of inward peace of Conscience and spirituall Joy which they might and should otherwise enjoy if they had more strength of Faith Hence it is that David sometimes felt so little inward peace and comfort and on the contrary so great inward trouble and discomfort within himself as he complaineth Psal 42. and Psal 77. The cause hereof was the Weakness of his Faith even as himself implyeth plainly Psal 77. 10. when he saith This is mine Infirmity Thus also it wa● with Jonah Chap. 2. ver 4 7. being in the Whale's Belly through Weakness of Faith his Soul fainted within him for a time and he thought himself to be cast out of God'● sight 2. The Saints of God by Unbelief do oftentimes deprive themselves of those outward and corporal benefits and priviledges which otherwise they might enjoy as of that measure and degree of outward peace and prosperity God's Protection and Blessing in things of this life which they might otherwise en●oy yea they may and do sometimes wholly deprive themselves of these or some of these Blessings through their own Unbelief Numb 20. 12. Moses and Aaron by their Unbelief deprived themselves of the great benefit of coming into the promised Land of Canaan to dwell in it And Isa 7. 9. the Lord threatens his People the Jews that if they would not believe his Word and Promise given for their deliverance from their enemies they should not be established that is they should not enjoy the benefir of outward security and safety from those enemies but should be deprived of the same See also Joh. 11. 40. Exemplum Marthae Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Father of this possessed young man having first brought his Son to the Disciples to be dispossessed and they not being able to help him yet did not forthwith despair of help nor yet give over the use of further means but hereupon made sute unto Christ