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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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efficacy of the word is a pledge of the truth of it 2. 'T is a Commodious Instrument for this End and Purpose for there is a Wisdom in all Gods Institutions He that looketh upon an Axe will say this is an instrument made to cut So he that looketh upon the Scriptures must needs say this is a means to purifie The Word is more Morally accommodated to work upon the heart of man then any other Instrument Means or Doctrine in the World Now the Word doth so commodiously serve for this purpose because there are 1. Such pure Precepts 2. Such pure Examples 3. Such great helps to Purity 4. Great encouragements to Purity 5. Such great Terrours to disswade men from sin 1. There are pure Precepts setting forth the Nature of that Purity that is pleasing to God and so on the one hand they serve to humble us for our natural filthiness for verum est Index sui et obliqui Truth sheweth it self and discovereth errour also Iam. 1. 23. 'T is such a pure Doctrine that it sheweth a man his natural face and discovers soul spots And on the other side by these Precepts and Doctrines we are urged and injoyned to seek after true Purity and Holiness of the right Constitution 1 Tim. 1. 5. The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned The Word telleth us God will be served and that he will be served with a pure heart the right End and Scope of the whole Law as 't is a Gospel Rule is love to God and Man flowing from a sincere and renewed heart and a good Conscience rightly informed of Gods Will and Faith unfeigned apprehending the Grace of God towards us in Christ our Redeemer So that you see there is required of us not only good Actions but good Principles and Ends. The Apostle telleth us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of the Law was written upon Mans heart Rom. 2. 14. Natural Conscience will take notice of some gross Acts urge to some external Conformity and show of Duty But the Word of God taketh notice not only of acts but the frame of the heart not only of sins but also of lusts If ever there were an instrument fitted to do a thing the Word is fitted to make men pure and holy Briefly then the Word requireth purity of Heart and Life that we should be pure in heart Matth. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God and pure in Life Blessed are the undefiled in the way Ps. 119. 1. you have both in one place Iam. 4. 8. Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your Hearts ye double minded both must be cleansed both heart and hands But we must first begin with the Heart The Heart is that polluted Fountain from whence floweth all the pollution of Life Matth. 15. 19. Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Murthers Adulteries Blasphemies c. 'T is in vain to cleanse the out-side unless the Heart be cleansed and therefore the Scripture presseth us to wash our hearts from wickedness Ier. 4. 14. There is the difficulty 'T is more easie to heal an outward wound than to stanch an inward bleeding and the cause is within The purity of the outside is loathsome to God unless the heart be cleansed 't is more easie to prevent disorders in our Conversations than to cleanse our hearts and therefore the Scripture mainly calleth upon you to purge out sin out of the heart Matth. 23. 26 27. Therefore the great design of the Word of God with which it travaileth is to get the heart clean as Elisha when he would cure the brackishness of the Waters cast falt into the Fountain so doth the Word of God seek to cleanse the hearts of men and all its wooings and pleadings and intreaties tend to this 2. There are pure Examples and Patterns we miscarry by low Examples and grow loose and careless seeing others to be so therefore the Word is still to keep us humble under our defects unsatisfied with our present measure always contending and striving towards the mark it propoundeth all manner of examples to us It propoundeth the example of God 1 Pet. 1. 15. Be ye holy as he that hath called you is Holy in all manner of Conversation God is holy in all his ways and Righteous in all his works and so should we be And the Scripture presseth us to be holy as Christ is holy 1 Iohn 3. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as Christ is pure 'T is impossible there should be an exact equality yet some answerable Conformity there should be God is essentially immutably infinitely holy He loveth himself so much as he can be loved His Essence and his Being is the same with his Holiness Our Holiness is a superadded Quality Gods Holiness is like a vessel of pure Gold where the substance is the same with the lustre but our holiness is like a vessel of Earth gilded with Gold the substance is one thing the varnish another But yet this God and Christ must ever be before our Eyes we must be holy as he is holy we must always be encreasing in holiness We must come into an abiding state of holiness There must be some kind of Conformity between God and us and Christ and us and head and members must be all of a piece He will shoot farther that aimeth at a Star than he that aimeth at a shrub So he will be more holy that doth as God doth than he that doth as sinful Creatures do like himself Nay the Scripture propoundeth the example of the Saints Heb. 6. 12. We need all kind of examples As we need high and glorious examples that we may not rest in any low degrees and beginnings of purity So lower examples that we may not be discouraged and think it impossible And therefore the Saints of God are propounded to us Men and Women of like affections with us the same natural interests and we the same grace with them the way to heaven is a troden path all along you may see the foot-steps of the Saints before you 3. The Scripture offereth great Helps to purity Christ dyed to purchase it for us Ephes. 5. 27. He gave himself for us that he might Sanctifie and Cleanse us by the washing of water through the Word And God hath promised to give this clean heart to them that seek after it and undertaketh to give what he requireth Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idols will I cleanse you A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you a heart of flesh And I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and ye shall keep my judgements
favour that often resort to him carry on a constant communion with him those that are waiting for his power and presence in his Ordinances these are the men God will own We are not fit to receive so great a blessing as Gods favour if we will not look after it with diligence 2dly Observe Those that would seek God aright must seek him with their whole heart But how is that Besides what hath already been spoken of it in the Second Use it noteth three things 1. Sincerity of aims 2. Integrity of parts 3. Uniformity of endeavours 1. Sincerity of aims Many pretend to seek God but indeed they do but seek themselves As those that followed Christ for the loaves that take up Religion upon base and carnal respects Ioh. 6. 26. Verily I say unto you Ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles but because ye did eat of the loaves and were filled There was much outward diligence but a false heart lurking under it their belly drove them to him Of all by-ends this is the worst and basest Vix diligitur Iesus propter Iesum Jesus Christ is scarce loved for Jesus sake Yet further those that prayed to God for corn wine and oyl and did not seek his favour and grace in the first place see what the Lord saith of them Hos. 7. 14. They have not cried unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds They did seek God but yet it is counted howling They only minded the supply of outward wants and made prayer meerly to be an act of carnal self-love and then it is but howling such a noise as a dog or a beast would make when he wants his food Christians no doubt they were instant there was a world of earnestness they were affected when the stroke was upon them and seriously desired to get rid of it But they have not cried to me with their whole heart it was but such a sense of pain and want as the beasts have If there be any thing sought from God more than God or not for God we do not seek him with the whole heart but only for other uses 2. It notes integrity of parts We read in Scripture of loving God not only with the heart but with the whole heart and of believing not only with the heart Rom. 10. 10. but of believing with the whole heart Act. 8. 37. Because seeking of God is but a Metaphorical term by which Faith is exprest therefore let us see what it is to believe with the whole heart The Doctrine of the Gospel is not only true to work upon the understanding but it is good so as to move and draw the will 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation c. Not only a faithful saying that is a true Doctrine That Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners but it 's worthy of all acceptation it 's an excellent Doctrine to ravish the will Now observe what a great deal of difference there is between men in believing Some that hear the Gospel and have only a literal knowledg of it so as to be able to talk of it so as to understand the words and syllables to know what it means they may have some clearness of understanding this way but there is not a sound assent There are others affected so with the Gospel as by the common influence of the Spirit they may assent to the truths delivered concerning God and Christ and Salvation by him yet do not give it entertainment in their hearts these may be said to seek God but not with the whole heart A speculative naked and cold assent they may have but that is not enough It 's not enough to see food that is wholesom but you must eat it nor is it enough to understand the Gospel and believe that it is true but we must embrace it it must be accepted else we do not believe with the whole heart The word is propounded to man as true now the truth made known may cause a speculative assent this may draw profession after it and this we call Historical Faith because we are no more affected with the Gospel than with an ordinary History which we read and believe The word is propounded again as good to move and excite the will Now there 's a twofold good the good of happiness and the good of holiness The good of happiness that which is profitable and sweet Then there 's the good of holiness Now there are many that look upon the Gospel as good and profitable because it offereth pardon and eternal life such comfort to the Conscience and such good to our whole souls We may be affected with it as a good Doctrine Naturally man hath not only a sense of Religion but he hath a hunger after Immortality and everlasting blessedness Therefore since the Gospel doth so clearly promote happiness it may be greedily catched hold of by those whose hearts are affected while they look upon it under these notions and they may be so far affected that they may for a while not only profess it out of danger but when some danger doth arise they may defend their opinions with some care yet this is not with all the heart why assoon as any great danger doth arise out of which there is no escape as Gibbets Fires Racks Ignominy and utter loss assoon as persecution arose saith Christ all this ardor and heat of spirit which they did formerly seem to have comes to nothing What 's the reason it vanisheth because they receive the Gospel rather upon those notions of interest and profit than of duty and holiness And the impression of the profitableness of the Gospel as a Doctrine of happiness was not so deeply rooted in them not so durable that the hope of the future good would be prevalent over the fear of present evil and danger There may be some desires of heaven in a carnal breast but they are easily blotted out by worldly temptations but the true desires of holiness are lasting and will prevail over our lusts 3. Believing with all the heart implies uniformity of endeavours Oftentimes the soul may be strongly moved and affected for the present and carried out to the Gospel under the notion of holiness but it is but the lighter part of the soul that is so moved not the whole heart therefore it is not durable The people meant as they spake when they were willing to come under the obedience of the Word God gives them that testimony The people have well said but O that there were such a heart in them Deut. 5. 28 29. They may receive it and may seem affected with it and have a sense of reformation but saith the Evangelist Luk. 8. 14. it brings no fruit to perfection It was not so deeply rooted as to prevail strongly over their carnal distempers And therefore here comes in another sort of men that are affected with the word as a holy
ask Gods leave in prayer and observe the bent of our hearts after prayer 4. The word of God teacheth a man when he understandeth his duty and hath Gods leave to submit the event to God and that easeth the heart because he may be sure of success comfort and support Psal. 37. 5. Commit thy way unto the Lord trust also in him and he shall bring it to pass And Prov. 16. 3. Commit thy work unto the Lord and thy thoughts shall be established It easeth us of a great deal of trouble and care so that when a man hath brought his affections to submit to whatever God should determine in point of success when he hath moderated and calm'd his spirit that he is resolved to bear the event whatever it be this easeth the soul of a deal of trouble Thus you see how we may make the statutes of God to be the men of our counsel USE 1. What a singular mercy is it that God hath given us the Scripture where we have counsel upon all occasions how to manage our affairs prudently bear afflictions comfortably and with composed hearts to get through all events and dangers that we meet with in our passage to heaven We should have groped up and down as the Sodomites for Lot's dore if we had not this rule of faith and obedience It is a Rule that teacheth us how to think well for it reacheth to the thoughts to speak well for it giveth a law to all our words to do well in all our civil actions and trading how to keep a good conscience and approve our selves to God how in natural actions eating drinking to season them with Gods fear and religious actions how we may pray and worship how to govern our selves our own hearts and affections to converse with others in all relations as Fathers Children Masters Servants Magistrates Ministers People and how to hold communion with God all which are demonstrations of the sufficiency of the Scripture for our direction and what reason there is that we should take the testimonies of God to be the men of our counsel USE 2. For reproof to those that turn the back upon Gods Counsels Who are those 1. Such as neglect the general duties of Christianity as Faith and Repentance God hath given us counsel what to do in order to eternal life and we regard it not The great quarrel between God and sinners is about the neglect of this counsel which he hath given them for their souls good Pro. 1. 25. They set at nought all my counsel and v. 30. They would none of my counsel O! when your friends have advised you and you despise it and take another course it troubleth them You know how heinously Achitophel took it when his counsel was despised Equals when their counsel is despised take it very ill much more Superiors when they give counsel The entreaty and advice of a Superior carrieth the force of a command So it is here with God it is called counsel not as if it were an arbitrary thing whether we did regard it or no but because of Gods mild condescension when men are in danger of perishing for ever the Lord gives us counsel You are in a miserable estate he is pleased to tell you how to come out of your misery the word of God therefore is called the counsel of God It is sad when we shall reject the counsel of God Luk. 7. 30. They rejected the counsel of God against themselves There 's two sentences they rejected the counsel of God and it was against themselves it was to their own loss and destruction God Ioseth nothing when we despise his counsel but you lose all your eternal happiness This is so great an evil that God punisheth it with it self When men will not take Gods counsel then it is the most dreadful Judgment he can lay upon us to give us up to our own counsel Psal. 81. 11. O what a heavy judgment was it to be given up to the counsels of their own heart 2. It reproves such as do not consult with Gods word about their affairs but meerly live as they are acted by their own lusts or walk at all adventures so the expression in the marginal reading is Lev. 26. 21. It is as the action falls they do not care whether it please God or be the rule of their duty yea or no. These are far from the temper of Gods children It is sad in persons much more in Nations when men run head-long upon all manner of disorders against right and honesty it tends to ruin Deut. 32. 28. They are a Nation void of counsel neither is there any understanding in them 3. Such as go flatly against the counsel of God and to gratifie their own interest pervert all that is just and honest Psal. 107. 11. They rebelled against the word of the Lord and contemned the counsel of the Most High These do but expose themselves to speedy ruin Job 18. 7. Bildad said of the wicked His own counsel shall cast him down They need no other means to ruin them than their own brutish course When men dare break the commandment of God without any rel●…tancy to gratifie a worldly interest though for the present no evil comes of it yet afterwards they shall smart Prov. 19. 20. Hear counsel and receive instruction that thou mayest be wise for thy latter end Consider what it will come to afterwards when thou comest to dye then you will wish O that I had taken Gods counsel that I had not gone with such a daring spirit against the plain counsel of Gods word 4. Such as pretend to ask counsel from the word but it is according to the Idol of their own hearts that come with their own conclusions and preconceptions and prejudices against Gods counsel Ezek. 14. 3 4. Son of man these have set up their idols in their heart c. Men will come and pretend to ask Gods counsel and leave upon their undertakings when they are resolved upon a wicked enterprise before then God must be called upon and sought to and so they make Gods Ordinance a Lacquey meerly to be a covert to their evil practices as those in Jer. 42. that came to the Prophet and they were prepossest and had their resolutions aforehand USE 3. To press us to this consulting with the word of God to make the testimonies of the Lord the men of our counsel There are many qualifications and tempers of heart necessary 1. Fear of God Psal. 25. 12. What man is he that feareth the Lord him will he teach the way that he shall chuse He that is in doubt and perplexed and would have counsel from Gods word who is the man that is like to have it He that feareth the Lord. There is a great sutableness between the qualification and the promise partly he that fears God hath a greater awe of the word than others have and is loth to do any thing contrary to Gods
will be so far from sleeping that he will not so much as slumber when we know nothing his Providence finds out the secret contrivances that are against us I tell you God is our Father he will maintain us and take care for us when we live by Faith and not by shifts in a good plain down-right course of honesty Gen. 17. 1. I am God all sufficient walk before me and be thou perfect That is they should go on doing their duty and refer the care of their safety to God Oh then cast your selves upon the Lord he will either direct your way to eschew these snares or pluck your feet out of them if you be taken therein Psal. 25. 13. Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord he shall pluck my feet out of the snare Look to him for direction and counsel 2. Bless God for your safety and preservation 't is a mercy to have a Being in the midst of so many dangers and snares as way-lay us everywhere especially should we bless God when we have escap'd some notable Trap and Pit that was digged for us Psal. 124. 7. Our soul is escaped like a bird out of the snare of the fowler the snare is broken and we are escaped This is a passage we may use to God this day there are two grounds usually of thanksgiving for this deliverance 1. That their Devices came to nought Job 15. 35. They conceive mischief and bring forth vanity It discovereth the wisdom power goodness and watchfulness of God that this dark and hellish machination that they thought so wisely laid that all Devils in Hell could not discover it yet the God of Heaven brought it to light Prov. 21. 30. There is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsel against the Lord. Those three words set out the quintessence of parts Wisdom noteth a quick apprehension Understanding a wise foresight grounded upon Experience Counsel a designation of some rare Artifice Isa. 8. 9 10. Associate your selves O ye people and ye shall be broken in pieces and all ye of far countries gird your selves and ye shall be broken in pieces Take counsel together and it shall come to nought speak the word and it shall not stand for God is with us 2. The mischief return'd back upon themselves Psal. 7. 15. He made a pit and digged it and is faln into the ditch which he made Higgaion Selah Their instruments 't is a high Note that we may observe it An Iron heated red hot burneth their fingers that hold it they are taken in their own Pit poison'd in their own Cup holden in cords of their own vanity so that in the issue it appeareth they laid a snare for themselves rather than for us USE II. As they are Inticements to Sin so we may make many uses of it 1. You oug●…t to ask God's counsel for you walk in the midst of snares that he would guide you and lead you Psal. 27. 11. Teach me thy way O Lord lead me in a plain path because of min enemies Those that watch for our halting are many their craft is great therefore go to the wise God for counsel ask of him what your way and course shall be for he seeth that which you see not 2. Get spiritual wisdom and understanding An ignorant credulous heart is soon seduc'd but a man of understanding that seeth his danger is not easily drawn and allur'd into it Prov. 1. 17. In vain is the snare laid in the sight of any bird The vain credulous simple young man is soon enti●…'d by the lewd woman in the 7th of the Proverbs 3. Keep the High-way of Duty and walk by a sure Rule and then you are safe David saith here I erred not from thy precepts In a time of snares often consult with your Rule 't is Satan's aim to put us out of our way As when the Fisherman would get the Fishes into the Net he seeketh to rouze them out of their place Take a man out of God's way and he becometh a ready Prey to Satan In doubtful cases there is no man chuseth the worst but first he breaketh some known Rule and clear moral Precept therefore be punctual and keep close to God's directions in clear and known cases and you are safe 4. There needs a mortifi'd heart to worldly Interests our temporal Interest is to be shaken off Men of carnal affections seeketh out the snare Job 18. 8. He is cast into a net by his own ●…eet and he walketh upon a snare If we will find the sin and disposition of heart God will find the occasion and a man that hath a Commodity to put off Faith and a good Conscience will soon find a Chapman to truck with him Iudas was thinking of betraying Christ and the High Priests were plotting how to do it just at the same time worldliness layeth us open to the snare 1 Tim. 6. 9. But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition But he that is dead to worldly interests remaineth firm whatever bait be proposed 2. We come to the Persons that manag'd the Temptation the wicked The wicked have laid a snare for me Doct. It is the property of a wicked heart to plot and lay snares for the mischief and ruine of others especially God's People David saith here The wicked have laid snares for me 1. 'T is a deliberate voluntary Sin and the more will and advisedness in any sin the greater it is Laying of snares is not a thing done in passion but in cool blood there is art and cunning in it and the heart dwelleth long upon it The Will sets the Wit awork to weave the Net and frame the Devise Involuntarium minuit de ratione peccati When a thing is involuntary it lesseneth sin a man may be overtaken with a fault Gal. 6. 1. But when he studieth it 't is much the worse God's children are surpriz'd through unweariness and made to stumble in a Fit of Temptation but when mens wits are bended to project and plot sin 't is not an infirmity but an iniquity Prov. 6. 14. Frowardness is in his heart he deviseth mischief continually he soweth discord 'T is the description of a naughty heart so the Prophet Micah 2. 1. Wo to them that devise iniquity and work evil upon their beds when the morning is light they practise it because it is in the power of their hands Their wickedness is premeditated then wo to them 2. 'T is a sign that Evil is connatural to them when they are plotting as Poison is to a Spider they are always working it never out of their way by night and by day their hearts run upon it Prov. 4. 16. Whenever they are abroad they sleep not unless they have done mischief and their sleep is taken away unless they cause some to fall Then when others cannot rest they examine themselves Psal. 4. 4. Commune with
from God that we may stand against his batteries and assaults Thirdly Because of the great impression which our temporal condition makes upon us We are now happy anon afflicted Now as unequal uncertain weather doth afflict the Body so do our various Conditions distemper the Soul To abound and to be abased to be up and to be down to carry an equal hand in unequal conditions is very hard and will call for the supporting strength of Gods spirit So the Apostle Phil. 12. 13. I know how to be abased and how to abound every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me From that place let me observe something 1. That we are subject to change of Conditions in outward things sometimes in credit sometimes in disgrace sometimes rich sometimes poor cut short by the Providence of God sometimes sick sometimes in health sometimes enjoy all things comfortably at other times reduced to great necessity Now it is very hard to go through all these Conditions not to be dejected on the one side or puffed up on the other 2. Observe again from that place Either of these conditions have their snares so that we need all the Grace that possibly we can get to avoid them Some think that snares and temptations lye but on one side namely they think it is easie to be rich and to maintain hope and comfort in God then but it is hard to be poor and to be destitute of all things when they have nothing to live upon they cannot see how they should live by faith or keep from murmurings repinings or uncomely dejections and sinkings of heart On the other side some think it easie to be poor and religious but how to keep a good Conscience in a full estate where there is so much to draw them from God to keep down pride and security and to live under a lively sense of the Comforts of the other world to do this in the midst of opulency this is hard There are indeed temptations on both hands 3. Observe again some that have held well in one condition have failed in another One sort of temptations have a greater force upon some spirits than others have When God hath kept men low they have been modest and humble but when they have been exalted then they have shewed themselves their pride their disdain their forgetfulness of God their mindlesness of the interest of Christ. On the other hand others have carried it well in prosperity yet when the bleak winds of adversity are let loose upon them they are withered and dryed up Some cannot encounter terrours others blandishments As the Prophet saith of Ephraim He is a Cake not turned that is baked only of the one side very dough on the other so it is with many men on one side of Providence they seem to do well but when God puts them in another condition they have foully miscarried 1 Kings 13. The young Prophet that could thunder out judgment against the King when the old Prophet enticed him he is gone 4. Nay and which is more to have these conditions to succeed one another makes the temptation the greater To be cast down after that we have got on the top of the wheel and have tasted of the worlds happiness is the greater tryal And so on the other side to be lifted up after extreme misery sudden changes affect us more Now to possess things without love or lose them without grief to be temperate and sober in the enjoyment of worldly happiness or to be meek and patient in the loss of it or to exercise a Christian moderation as to all these dispensations it 's a very hard thing to keep the heart steady and right with God and therefore we need the influence of Gods special Grace as the Apostle presently addes I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me Use. To press us to look after this upholding and sustaining Grace that as we come to God so we may keep with God In some Cases perseverance is more difficult than Conversion it is a harder thing to persevere than to be converted at first In the first Conversion we are mainly passive if not altogether but in perseverance active It is God that plants us into Christ but when we are in Christ we ought to walk in him As an Infant in the Mothers Womb before it is born lives by the life of the Mother and is fed and grows by the Mothers feeding without any concurrence of its own but when born indeed it is suckled by the Mother still but the Child sucks it self and applies nourishment to it self and the more it grows the more the care of its life is devolved upon it self So the first Conversion is chiefly Gods work and when converted we cannot persevere without his help but the care of the spiritual life is more devolved upon us than before God doth give perseverance as well as conversion 2 Pet. 1. 5. We are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation but so that more is required to be done by us when converted than in Conversion it self Ephes. 2. 10. the Apostle tells us that we are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works there 's an action required of us What is Conversion A consent to the terms of the Gospel-Covenant that 's the great act of Conversion on our part But now perseverance is the fulfilling of the duty of this Covenant now it is more easie to consent to the terms than to make them good As in the matrimonial Contract the promise of the duties proper to that relation is more easie than the performance so the consenting to Gods Covenant all the business is to make it good because of our unstable Nature manifold temptations and great discouragements in the way of holiness Certainly to keep in the life of Grace in the soul is a very hard thing The Israelites after they were brought to consent to receive Moses for their Captain to lead them to Canaan yet when they came out of Egypt and had tryal of the difficulties of the way and were exposed to so many dangers they were ever and anon desiring to return So it is with us it is hard to hold out against all assaults many things will be interposing and breaking your resolutions and taking you off from God The flesh will be interposing so that you must often say as Rom. 5. 12. We are not debtors to the flesh to live after the flesh to fulfil it in the lusts thereof And the world will be threatning and you must say as they Dan. 3. 16. We are not careful to answer thee in this matter Dangers will grow upon us and encrease and then we must say as Esth. 4. 16. If we perish we perish Friends will be solliciting and you must say us Paul Act. 21. 13. What
and do them God hath promised this to some body and why not to you You are as fair for this promise as any and if God hath not excluded you why will you shut out your selves from the grace offered 4. There are in the Scripture excellent Incouragements and Motives from the reward promised to the pure Lactantius saith of the Heathen virtutis vim non sentiunt quia cjus praemium ignorant that they were Ignorant of the force of Vertue because they were not acquainted with the reward of it There is a great force in Scripture arguments in this kind See how the Scripture speaks of these promises they are so great so pure and so expresly binding in their Condition and Qualification annexed They are so great 2 Cor. 7. 1. that having such great and precious Promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit and perfect holiness in the Fear of God And then so pure 1 Iohn 3. 3. He that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as Christ is pure 'T is not barely said he that hath hope in him but he that hath this hope 'T is not a Turkish paradise but a sinless estate not an estate wherein we shall be ingulfed in all sensualities but satisfied with the Vision of God and made like him Heaven is not only to be looked upon as a place of happiness but a state of likeness to God Once more so many and so expresly binding to purity in their Condition and qualification annexed See what the Word of God speakes to purity if we would injoy the favour of God and have him good to us Psal. 73. 1. Truly God is good to Israel even to such as are of a clean heart Who are they that God will be good to To Israel all are not Israel that are of Israel but those whose Consciences are cleansed by the Blood of Christ and study to be clean and holy in heart and life Those are Gods Israel How ever things fall out here how blustering and boisterous soever the times are yet God will be good to them that are his Israel If we would have his favour actually exhibited if we would have God to shine upon us we must look after purity Psal. 18. 26. With the pure thou wilt shew thy self pure and with the froward thou wilt shew thy self froward God will be to man as man is to God No degree of purity shall go unrewarded the holy use of the Creatures is their priviledge Titus 1. 15. To the pure all things are pure To the wicked all things are defiled and they have a curse with their blessings but to the pure these blessings are lawfully enjoyed and are sanctified to them and they receive every temporal mercy as a blessing of the Covenant Would we be accepted in our service Prov. 15. 26. The thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord but the Words of the pure are pleasant Words The thoughts and words of wicked men are an abomination to the Lord but the thoughts and words of the Saints are his delight God hath respect to the person and then to their services so that we must be pure in heart if we would have our services accepted of the Lord. Once more the pure are those that shall be employed with Honour for God 2 Tim. 2. 21. If a man purge himself from these he shall be a vessel of Honour Sanctified and Meet for the Masters use and prepared unto every good work Again the purified and cleansed are meet to receive and retain the Word 1 Tim. 3. 9. Hold fast the Mysteries of faith in a pure Conscience None receive the word with such profit and retain it with such warmth as the pure in heart Precious liquors are not put into musty filthy vessels if it be 't is corrupted and spoiled presently Let a man be addicted to any worldly lust and he will soon lose all the sense of good he hath received Once more none pray a●…ight but the pure Zeph. 3. 9. For then will I turn to the People a pure Language that they may call upon the Name of the Lord and 1 Tim. 2. 8. Lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting and Heb. 10. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience Then we draw near to God with Comfort being sure of audience Once more if we would be happy for ever more Who are they that shall see God Matth. 5. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God You shall see the question propounded in the Psalm 24. 3 4. Who shall ascend into the Hill of the Lord Who shall stand in his holy place And the question is answered in the third verse He that hath clean hands and a pure heart It standeth us upon to examine how it is with us since all the visible Church are not saved the Pure and Holy are they that shall see and injoy God Filthy Dogs and Impure and Unclean Swine are not suffered to enter into the New Ierusalem 5. Here are terrible threatnings the Word is impatient of being denied It would have holiness and purity upon any terms there is something propounded to our fear as well as to our hope Sometimes the Word of God threatens with the loss of happiness Heb. 12. 14. Without holiness no man shall see the Lord. If there were no more but this this were enough to terrifie us to be shut out from the presence of the Lord if it were rightly considered But O! How miserable will the poor Creature be that The Word threatens with the loss of the vision of God supposing the soul subsists this is enough to overwhelm us that we shall never enter into the place where God is Revel 21. 17. There shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth or worketh abomination But we hear of a Worm that shall never dye a Pit without a bottom a Fire that shall never be quenched and Torments that are without end and without ease God shall say I would have purged you but you would not be purged Whose heart doth not tremble at the mention of these things Oh! Then you see the Word is very pure The second Consideration that this pure Word must me valued and esteemed and loved by us Here I shall shew you what 't is to love the Word and then why I. What 't is to love the Word First Negatively 1. 'T is not an outward receiving or a loose owning of the Scripture as the Word of God many carnal men may so receive it or rather not contradict it They receive the Word of God not upon any divine Testimony and Evidence of the Spirit of God but upon the Authority and Credit of Men the Practice and Profession of the Nation where they Live and the injunctions of the Civil state or the Tradition of the Church This is the just account of most mens
lives upon invisible things secured by Gods faithfulness p. 745 746 It hath an Eagles Eye p. 833. How to get it p. 834 Faith strengthned from the Consideration 1. Of Creation 2. Of Providence p. 584. From Events p. 285 Faith and Fear make us truly wise p. 645 Faith concerning the World to come a great help to the keeping of a good Conscience in this p. 417 Faith encreased by thankfulness p. 447 Faith Conjecture Opinion how they differ p. 286 Faith brings meat out of the caters p. 424. It keeps alive in a dead condition p. 161 How we may know that Faith is of Gods raising p. 327 Faith may Faint and not Fail p. 542. 836. It may fail in some degree p. 835 836 Faith its use in application of promises p. 768 Faith has notable operations 1. The adventure 2. The waiting 3. The resolution 4. The resignation 5. The prudence 6. The Obedience of Faith p. 326 Faithfulness of God relates to some promise it depends on Gods unchangeableness It has been evidenced in all Ages of the World p. 579 580. 831 Faithfulness of God to us should encourage our Faithfulness to him p. 581 How we are to depend on Gods Faithfulness p. 832 Seen 1. In bringing 2. Guiding afflictions p. 510 Falling of a greater dishonour to God then bare refusal p. 342 Fall All may fall in some measure p. 782 Fallen Man compared to a lost sheep p. 1101 Falshood is either 1. In point of Opinion or 2. Practise p. 678 Familiarity reconciles us to Troubles and Temptations p. 872 Familiarity with wicked persons to be avoided Why 1. From the contagion 2. The molestation 3. The seduction 4. The scandal that arises thence c. p. 774 775 Vid. Company of wicked men Family God provides for his Family p. 848 Fast-day the work thereof to put away the evil of our doings p. 658 Fatherly Love of God to his Children under discipline p. 592 Father of Mercies not of punishments p. 512 Favour of God in the sense of it may be withdrawn from his dearest children p. 925. It is the souls life p. 518 Favour of God sought for by all that chuse him for their portion Why When How p. 391 392 393 It is the fountain of all goodness p. 924 925 Favour of God the priviledge of those that walk with him p. 7. Gods Children account it a great favour if he will but look upon them p. 903. It is better than Life p. 926 Reasons 1. From the necessity 2. Their value of it 3. Their confidence p. 903 Fear is ballanced with a sence of Gods great mercies p. 994 Fear of God What p. 427. 290. Twofold Fear servile and filial p. 427 108 290 291 A great resister of sin p. 18. 664 665 A qualification of those that expect Counsel from God p. 154 The great principle of obedience p. 427 Fear filial twofold 1. Of Reverence 2. Caution p. 428 It s influence on obedience p. 428 429 Fear of God consistent 1. With blessedness 2. Comfort 3. Courage 4. Free Grace p. 429 430 Fear to off end an effect and sign of Love p. 861 A note of a true servant of God p. 290 291 292 Fear of God drives out the slavish fear of Man p. 808 Fear and Faith make us truly wise p. 645 Fear of Man a great snare p. 308 Fear of God from the Word of God p. 290 Fear and Shame how they differ p. 309 Feares and cares checkt by Gods Faithfulness p. 511 Feeling of deadness a sign of some life p. 934 Feet what meant by Feet in Scripture p. 400. 658. 395 Fellowfeeling a duty though we feel nothing in our own persons p. 145 Fellowship with the Godly a great happiness p. 527 Fervor and vehemency required in Prayer p. 898. 926 What it is How to obtain it p. 901 902 Vid. Earnestness and Vehemency A few wicked may bring great judgements p. 805 Few punished should make all the rest fear p. 809 Fickleness in obedience matter of humiliation p. 341 Vid. unsteadiness Fidelity in keeping the Commandements should be joyn'd with Faith in believing the promises p. 458 Fir●… of Tryals purgeth away dross p. 803 Fixed Spirit its excellency p. 525 526 Necessary to the sound heart p. 532. 752 Means to get a fixed spirit p. 535. 596 Fixed desires after holiness to be laboured for p. 308 309 Flashes of Religion Vid. Moods Pangs Flee to Gods Mercy through Christ p. 517 Flesh not to be consulted p. 411 Floods of Wickedness breaking out should put us upon prayer that God would deliver his people p. 855 Fool hardiness to rush into evil Company p. 776 Folly in sinning p. 684 Fore-armed against temptations a duty p. 869 Forbearance of God with sinners upon what grounds p. 855 856 Force Some do good by Force Two ways p. 1076 Forfeiture of mercy by ingratitude p. 422 by using indirect means to get out of trouble p. 542 Forerunners of mercy p. 868 Forgetting is neglecting p. 553. 596 Forgetfulness of Gods Word p. 99 It is Twofold p. 596 Helps against it p. 100 We are naturally apt to forget God p. 366 Formality not regarded by God p. 44 Formalists insist much on little matters p. 33 Formal and Godly professors how they differ p. 12 Former judgments to be laid to heart when like sins abound p. 808 809. 345 Former judgements are to be told to after Ages p. 345 Forsaken of God visibly What 1. When God lets loose Enemies 2. When he comforts not 3. When he directs not 4. When he supports not in an afflicted condition p. 818 Forsaking utterly to be forsaken of God ought to be earnestly deprecated p. 336 Forsaking God and duty to him in trials VVhat 1. To lose our patience 2. Our Confidence in him 3. To desert the Truth p. 414 415 Arguments against forsaking of God ibid God forsaketh none but those that forsake him p. 498 Forsaking God is 1. Folly 2. Rebellion 3. Ingratitude 4. Injustice p. 349. 350 Fortitude true when we can bear reproach for Christ p. 870 Fortifie within against temptations without p. 343 Against 1. Errors 2. Persecutions 3. Scandals ibid. Foundation of the stability of Gods Testimonies 1. Gods Nature 2. The blood of Christ p. 957 Vid. Testimonies Foundation of Righteousness the sure Foundation p. 817 Foundation of spiritual Life said in the word p. 880 Fountain of all goodness is God p. 471 513 514 Fountain of wisdom and knowledge God p. 636 Frame of heart right 1. When the principle is right 2. When there 's a constant progression suitable to that principle p. 892 To long for subjection to the will of God p. 303 Frame of heart spiritual in holy things difficult to be maintained p. 754 Several enquiries about the frame of the heart p. 754 Frame of the heart required by the word as well as the outward Act p. 859 A right frame of heart in six particulars p. 478 Frame of heart evil when we continue not in
have There is a difference between a dead sea and a calm sea A stupid Conscience they may have not a quiet conscience The virtue of that Opium will soon be spent Conscience will again be awakened Use. Oh then let us put in for a share in this Blessedness There are two encouragements in the Service of Christ our Vails and our Wages our Wages should be enough the Eternal enjoyment of himself But oh we cry out of the tediousness of the way We have our Vails also that are not contemptible If a man should offer a Lordship or Farm to another and he should say The way is dirty and dangerous the Weather very troublesome I will not look after it Would you not accuse this man of folly that loves his ease and pleasure But now if this man were assured of a pleasant path and good way if he would but take a little pains to go over and see it this were gross folly indeed to refuse it Our Lord hath made over a blessed Inheritance to us upon Gospel-terms but we are full of prejudices in that to keep close to the rule may bring trouble and deprive us of many advantages of gain and we think we shall never see good day more But we are assured there is a great blessing goeth along with Gods yoke and we having a promise of the enjoyment of Gods presence where there are pleasures for evermore this should make us rowse up our selves in the Work of the Lord. SERMON II. PSAL. CXIX 2. Blessed are they that keep his testimonies that seek him with the whole heart IN this Psalm the Man of God begins with a description of the way to true blessedness In the former verse a blessed man is described by the course of his actions Blessed are the undefiled in the way In this by the frame of his heart Blessed are they that keep his testimonies that seek him with the whole heart The internal principle of good actions is the verity and purity of the heart Here you may take notice of two marks of a blessed man 1. They keep his testimonies 2. They seek him with the whole heart Doct. 1. They that keep close to Gods testimonies are blessed By way of Explication two things take notice of 1. The notion that is given to Precepts and Counsels in the word they are called his testimonies 2. The respect of the blessed man to these testimonies to keep them First The notion by which the word of God is exprest is Testimonies whereby is intended the whole declaration of Gods will in Doctrines Commands Examples Threatnings Promises The whole word is the testimony which God hath deposed for the satisfaction of the world about the way of their salvation Now because the word of God brancheth it self into two parts the Law and the Gospel this notion may be applied to both First To the Law in regard whereof the Ark is called the Ark of the Testimony Exod. 25. 16. because the two Tables were laid up in it The Gospel is also called the testimony the testimony of God concerning his Son Isa. 8. 20. To the law and to the testimony where Testimony seems to be distinguished from the Law The Gospel is so called because there God hath testified how a man shall be pardoned reconciled to God and obtain a right to eternal life We need a testimony in this case because it is more unknown to us The Law was written upon the heart but the Gospel is a stranger Natural light will discern something of the Law and pry into matters which are of a moral strain and concernment but Evangelical truths are a mystery and depend by the meer testimony of God concerning his Son Now from this notion of Testimonies we have this advantage 1. That the word is a full declaration of the Lords mind God would not leave us in the dark in the matters which concern the service of God and mans salvation He hath given us his Testimony he hath told us his mind what he approves and what he disallows and upon what terms he will accept of sinners in Christ. It is a blessed thing that we are not left to the uncertainty of our own thoughts Mic. 6. 8. He hath shewed thee O man what is good The way of pleasing and enjoying God is clearly revealed in his word There we may know what we must do what we may expect and upon what terms We have his testimony 2. Another advantage we have by this notion is The certainty of the word it is Gods Testimony The Apostle saith 1 Joh. 5. 9. If we take the testimony of men the testimony of God is greater It is but reason we should allow God that value and esteem that we give to the testimony of men who are fallible and deceitful Among men in the mouth of two or three witnesses every thing is established Deut. 19. 15. Now there are three that bear witness in heaven and three that bear witness on earth 1 Joh. 5. 7 8. We are apt to doubt of the Gospel and have suspicious thoughts of such an excellent doctrine but now there are three witnesses from heaven the Father Word and Spirit the Father by a voice Mat. 3. 7. And lo a voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son c. And the Son also by a voice when he appeared to Paul from Heaven Saul Saul why persecutest thou me And the Holy Ghost gave his testimony descending upon him in the form of a Dove and upon the Apostles in cloven tongues of fire And there are three that bear record on earth for he saith v. 10. He that believeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath the testimony in himself what is that The Spirit Water and Blood in the heart of a believer these give testimony to the Gospel The Spirit bears witness to the Gospel when it illuminateth the heart enabling us to discern the Doctrine to be of God to discern those signatures and characters of Majesty Goodness Power Truth which God hath left upon the Gospel and Water and Blood testifie when we feel those constant and sensible effects of Gods power coming with the Gospel 1 Thes. 1. 5. both by pacifying the Conscience and bringing joy and satisfaction and by sanctifying and freeing a man from the bondage of sin Water signifies Sanctification Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth The Sanctifying power of God that goes along with the Gospel is a clear confirmation of the Divine testimony in it Ioh. 8. 32. The truth shall make you free By our disintanglement from lust we come to be setled in the truth Gods testimony is the ultimate resolution of our faith Why do we believe because it is Gods testimony How do we know it is Gods testimony it evidenceth it self by its own light to the consciences of men yet God for the greater satisfaction to the world hath given us witnesses three from heaven and three on earth Every manifestation of God
them out of his presence they become the scorn of Saints and Angels Dan. 12. 2. And many of them that sleep in the dust shall arise some to everlasting life and some to shame and everlasting contempt But now the godly are bold and confident Psal. 1. 5. The ungodly shall not stand in the judgment nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous But the godly shall lift up their head with joy and rejoicing Now the Reasons of this Where sin is not allowed there is a threefold comfort 1. Justification 1 Joh. 1. 7. But if we walk in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Iesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin It is an evidence that giveth us the comfort He hath failings but they are blotted out for Christs sake 2. It is an evidence of sanctification that a work of grace hath passed upon us 2 Cor. 1. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you ward Heb. 13. 18. We trust that we have a good conscience willing in all things to live honestly An universal purpose and an unfeigned respect hath the full room of an evidence 3. A pledg of glory to ensue Rom. 5. 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Use. It informeth us by the rule of Contraries That we deceive our selves if we look for any thing from sin but shame Rom. 6. 21. For the wages of sin is death Sin and shame entred into the world together How were Adam and Eve confounded after the fall Sin is odious to God it grieveth the Spirit but the person that committeth it shall be filled with shame In the greatest privacy sin bringeth shame Men are not solitary when they are by themselves there is an eye and ear which seeth and observeth them there is a law in our hearts which upbraids our sins to us as soon as we have committed them a secret bosom-witness 2. It informeth us what hard hearts they have that have respect to no commandments yet are not ashamed They have outgrown all feelings of conscience and so glory in their shame Phil. 3. 19. Whose end is destruction whose God is their belly and whose glory is in their shame who mind earthly things Erubuit salva res est By how much less they are ashamed now the more they shall be their shamelesness will encrease their shame Jer. 3. 3. Thou hadst a whores forehead thou refusedst to be ashamed The Conscience of a sinner is like a Clock dull calm and at rest when the weights are down but wound up it 's full of motion 3. Here is caution to Gods children The less respect you have to the Commandments the more shame will you have in your selves Partiality in obedience breaketh your confidence and over-clouds your peace Therefore that we may not blemish our profession let us walk more exactly So shall we not be ashamed when we have respect to all Gods Commandments SERMON VIII PSAL. CXIX 7. I will praise thee with uprightness of heart when I shall have learned thy righteous judgments IN this Verse David expresseth his esteem of the Word by telling what he would give for the knowledg and practice of it As we use to tell a man how thankful we would be if he would do thus and thus for us So Lord if thou wilt give me to learn thy righteous judgments then I will praise thee c. His promise of praise manifesteth his esteem which should affect our stupid hearts The Canon is now larger and the mysteries of the Word are more clearly unfolded If the Saints of God were so taken with it before when there were so scanty and dark representations in comparison of what is now O what honour and praise do we now owe to God! In this Verse observe 1. The Title that is given to the Word Thy righteous judgments 2. His Act of Duty about it or the benefit which he desireth sound erudition When I shall have learned 3. The fruit of this benefit obtained Then will I praise thee 4. The manner of performing this duty With uprightness of heart First The Title that is given to the Word Thy righteous judgments or as it is in the Margent the judgments of thy righteousness Hence observe Doct. Gods precepts are and are so accounted of by his people as righteous judgments or judgments of righteousness There are two Terms to be Explained 1. What is meant by judgments 2. By righteousness For the First Righteousness is sometimes put alone for the Word and so also Judgments as we shall find in this Psalm but here both are put together to increase the signification The precepts of the Word are called judgments for two Reasons 1. Because they are the Judicial sentence of God concerning our state and actions 2. Because of the suitable execution that is to follow First They are the Judicial sentence of God concerning our state and actions The judicial sentence that is they are the Decrees of the Almighty Law-giver given forth with an authority uncontroulable A man may appeal from the sentence of men but this is judgment this is as certain as if he were executed presently There is injustice and oppression many times in the Courts of men but there 's a higher than the highest regards it and there be higher than they Eccles. 5. 8. There may be another Tribunal to which we may appeal from the unjust sentences of men but there is no appeal from God for there is no higher Judicature Paschalis a Minister of the Albigenses when he was burnt at Rome cited the Pope and his Cardinals before the Tribunal of the Lamb. When we are wronged and opprest here we may cite them before the Tribunal of God and Christ but who can appeal from the Tribunal of Christ himself And then this sentence is concerning our state and actions 1 Our State whether it be good or evil The word sentenceth you now for instance If a man be in a carnal state Joh. 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already How condemned already In the sentence of the Law so he is gone and lost Every unbeliever such as all are by nature is condemned already having only the slender thread of a frail life between him and the execution of it The sentence of the Law standeth in force against him since he will not come to Christ to get it repeal'd This sentence standeth in force against all Heathens which never heard of Christ and are condemned already by the Law But now Christians or those that take up such a profession and have heard of the Gospel on them it is confirmed by a new sentence since they will not fly
the request We pray for giving success to such an enterprize why that we may serve God safely God will bring it about another way Fifthly If God do not give us the blessings themselves we ask yet he gives us many experiences by the by in the manner of asking one way or other something comes into the soul by praying to God as those in Psal. 84. their end was to go to Ierusalem but in passing through the valley of Baca they met with a Well by the way So we meet with something by the way some light or some sweet refreshing some new consideration to set us a work in the spiritual life By praying to God unawares unthought of by you there are many principles of faith drawn forth in the view of conscience not noted before some truth or other presented to the heart or some spiritual benefit that comes in with fresh light and power that was never aimed at by us USE 1. If God be so ready to hear his people Let us not throw away our prayers as children shoot away their arrows but let us observe Gods answer what comes in upon every prayer in every address you make to God put the soul in a posture of expectation Psal. 5. 3. I will pray and look up and Psal. 85. 8. I will hear what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace unto his people See what God speaks when you have been praying and calling upon him It argues a slight formal spirit when you do not observe what comes in upon your addresses To quicken you to this know 1. If you observe not his answer God loseth a great deal of honour and praise for 't is said Psal. 50. 15. Call upon me in time of trouble and I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Every answer of prayer makes for the glory of God and Col. 4. 2. Continue in prayer and watch in the same with thanksgiving You are not only to see how your hearts are carried out in prayer but watch for God's answer that you may gather matter of praise We should not be so barren in gratulation as usually we are if we were as ready to observe our experiences as to lay forth our necessities 2. You lose many an argument of trust and confidence Answers of Prayer are an argument against Atheism which is so natural to us and inbred in our hearts it perswades us that there is a gracious being Psal. 65. 2. O thou that hearest prayer unto thee shall all flesh come we have called upon him and found that there is a God and against the natural unbelief which doubts of his truth in his Promises Psal. 18. 30. The word of the Lord is a tried word he is a buckler to all those that trust in him Well saith the soul I will build upon it another time there is more than letters and syllables in it there is something that speaks Gods heart so Psal. 116. 2. The Lord hath heard my voice and my supplications because he hath enclined his ear unto me therefore will I call upon him as long as I live Promises shall not lye by as a dead stock I will be pleading them 3. It encreaseth our love to God when we see how mindful he is of us and kind to us in our necessities it is a very taking thing Visits maintain friendship so when God is mindful of us it maintains an intercourse between God and us Psal. 116. 1. I love the Lord because he hath heard my supplications Therefore observe what comes in upon your prayers especially when your hearts are earnestly carried out by the impulses of his grace USE 2. To admire the goodness of God to poor creatures that he should be at leisure to attend our requests I declared my ways and he heard me When a poor soul that is of no regard among men shall come with conflicts and temptations and the Lord presently hear him it renders his grace truly admirable Psal. 34. 6. This poor man cryed and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles He doth not say this eminent Prophet or this great King but this poor man O! that such contemptible persons as we should have such audience For Great ones here in the world to let a poor man tell his tale at large that would be counted great patience much more if he finds relief in the case But beyond all this observe the goodness of God The more we declare our ways the sooner doth he hear us he doth not turn away from us when we tell him plainly we cannot believe in him or trust in him Come to a man and tell him You have made me great promises but I cannot believe you speak truth this will provoke him but when you come to the Lord and say Lord thou hast made a great many promises though we cannot trust him as we should yet we have declared our sins conflicts temptations yet Lord pity our weakness Thirdly Here is his Petition Teach me thy statutes First I observe David having been once heard of God expects to be heard in the like manner again Here Thou hast heard me and then comes with a new request Teach me thy statutes Doct. 1. Those that have sped with God in one address they will be dealing with God for more mercy For so doth David The reason is 1. Because God is where he was at first he is not weary by giving nor doth waste by giving but what he hath done that he can do and will do still I AM is God's name not I was or will be for ever remaining in the same constant tenor of goodness and power His Providence is still new and fresh every morning God is but one always like himself He hath not so spent himself but he can work again Creatures have soon spent their allowance but God cannot be exhausted There 's no decays of Love or Power in him no wrinkle in the brow of Eternity There was is and will be a God 2. Experience breeds Confidence the Apostle teacheth us so Rom. 5. 4. when we have had former experience of Gods readiness to hear us it is an argument that breeds confidence of the like audience for the future He that delivered me out of the mouth of the Lion c. God that hath been gracious surely will be gracious still for then Promises are sensibly confirmed and then former mercies are pledges of future By giving God becomes a debtor Mat. 6. 25. Is not life more than meat and the body than raiment Our Saviours argument this was If God give life he will give food if a body he will give raiment If he hath given grace the earnest of the Spirit he will give glory If he hath given us Christ he will give us other things together with him If he hath begun with us he will end with us Phil. 1. 6. One mercy is the pledg of another 3. We are endeared to God not only by
doctrine Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy word is truth Hereby we know the word of God is truth because it is so powerful to sanctification Psal. 119. 140. Thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loveth it All Religions endeavour some kind of excellency but now the holiness that is recommended in other Religions is a meer outside holiness in comparison of what Christianity calls for We have a strict Rule high Patterns blessed encouragement it promiseth a powerful Spirit even the Spirit of the holy God to work our heart to this holiness that is required The aim of that Religion is to remedy the disease introduced by the fall All other Religions do but make up a part of the disease and the Gospel is the only remedy and cure Therefore this is the way of truth you should chuse 3. That doctrine which provideth for peace of conscience and freedom from perplexing fears which are wont to haunt us by reason of Gods Justice and wrath for our former misdeeds that doctrine hath the true effect of a Religion Man easily apprehends himself as God's creature and being God's creature he is his subject bound to obey him and having exceedingly failed in his obedience as experience shews he is much haunted with fears and doubts Now that 's the Religion that in a kindly manner doth dispossess us of these dreads and fears and comes in upon the soul to deliver us from our bondage and those guilty fears which are so natural to us by reason of sin And therefore in a consultation about Religion if I were to chuse and had not by the grace of God been baptized into the Christian faith and had the advantage to look abroad and consider then I would bethink my self Where shall I find rest for my soul and from those fears which lye at the bottom of conscience and are easily stirr'd in us and sometimes are very raging there 's a fire smothering within and many times it is blown up into a flame Where shall I get remedy for these fears I rather pitch upon this because the Holy Ghost doth Ier. 6. 16. c. as if he had said If you will know what is the good way take that way where you may find rest for your souls not a false rest that 's easily disturbed not a carnal security but where you may find true solid peace that when you are most serious and mind your great errand and business you may comfort your selves and rejoyce in the God that made you In a false way of Religion there is no establishment of heart and sound peace Heb. 9. 9. They could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience That certainly is the true Religion which makes the worshipper perfect as to the conscience which gives him a well tempered peace in his soul not a sinful security but a holy solid peace that when he hath a great sense of his duty upon him yet he can comfortably wait upon God And you know our Lord himself useth this very motive to invite men Matt. 11. 29. Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy-laden and I will give you rest That is take the Christian Religion that easie yoke upon you and you shall find rest for your souls The Lord Jesus is our peace and the ground of our peace but we never find rest until we come under his yoke Christians search where you will there is no serious answer to that grand question which is the great scruple of the fallen creature Mic. 6. 7. how to appease angry Justice And we are told of those Locusts who are seducing spirits which come out of the bottomless pit Rev. 9. they had stings in their tails their doctrine is not soundly comfortable to the conscience Among others this is designed by those Locusts that half Christianity which is taken up by the light-skirted people which reflect upon priviledges only therefore there are such scruples and intricate debates But some advantage there is and some progress they may make in the spiritual life that cry up them without duties but they never have sound peace upon their souls unless the Lord pardon their mistakes and doth sanctifie their reflections upon those spiritual and unseen priviledges so as to check their opposite desires and inclinations It is best to be setled in God's way by Justification and Sanctification There is a wound wherein no plaister will serve for the cure but the way the Gospel doth take Consider altogether Christs renewing and reconciling grace the whole Evangelical truth this Gospel which was founded in the blood of Christ his new Covenant and sealed with God's Authority and doth so fitly state duties and priviledges and lead a man by the one to the other This is that which will appease the Lord. There is no setling of the conscience without it and therefore whatever you would expect in a Religion here you find it in that blessed Religion which is recommended to us in the Gospel or new Covenant there is such holiness and true sense of the other world which breeds an excellency and choiceness of spirit in men Prop. 7. Of all Sects and sorts among Christians the Protestant Reformed Religion will be found to be the way of truth why because there 's the greatest sutableness to the great ends the greatest agreement and harmony with God's revelation which they profess to be their only rule I say as to God's Worship there is most simplicity without that Theatrical pomp which makes the Worship of God a dead thing and so most sutable to a spiritual being and conducible to spiritual ends to God who is a Spirit and who will be worshipped in spirit and truth for there God is our reward and to be served by faith love obedience trust prayers praises and a holy administration of the Word and Seals more sutable to the genius of the Scripture without the Pageantry of numerous idle Ceremonies like flourishes about a great letter which do rather hide Religion than any way discover it yea betray it to contempt and scorn to a considering man Besides the great design of this Religion is to draw men from earth to heaven by calling them to a serious profession of saving truth Popery is nothing but Christianity abused and is a doctrine suited to Policy and temporal ends and it is supported by worldly greatness And then as to Holiness which is the genuine product of a Religion the true genuine holiness is to be found or should be found according to their principles among Protestants and Reformed not external mortification but in purging the heart And here is the true peace of conscience while men are directed to look to Christ's reconciling and renewing grace and not to seek their acceptance in the merit of their own works and voluntary penance and satisfactions and many other doctrines which put the conscience upon the rack And then all this is submitted to be tried
opinion otherwise he loseth the glory and the benefit of his Religion he is but a Pagan in God's account Ier. 9. 25. he makes his Religion to be call'd in question and therefore he that walks unsuitably he is said to deny the Faith 1 Tim. 5. 8. To be a Christian in doctrine and a Pagan in life is a temptation to Atheism to others when the one destroys the other practice confutes their profession and profession confutes their practice therefore both these must be matched together Thus the way of truth must be the rule and a holy life must be suited 2. As to this holy life a general good intention sufficeth not but there must be accurate walking why for God doth not judg of us by the lump or by a general intention It is not enough to plead at the day of judgment you had a good scope and a good meaning for every action must be brought to judgment whether it be good or evil Eccles. 12. 14. When we reckon with our servants we do not expect an account by heap but by parcels so a general good meaning giving our account by heap will not suffice but we must be strict in all our ways and keep close to the rule in every action in your eating trading worship Eph. 5. 15. See that you walk circumspectly c. see that you do not turn aside from the line and narrow ridg that you are to walk upon 3. Accurate walking will never be unless our Rule be diligently regarded and set before us why 1. So accurate and exact is the Rule in it self that you may easily swerve from it therefore it must always be heeded and kept in your eye Psal. 19. David admired the perfections of the Law for the purity of it and for the dominion of it over conscience what was the issue of that contemplation see v. 12. Who can understand his errors cleanse thou me from secret faults Thus the best man when he compares himself with the Law will be forced to blush and acknowledg more faults than ever he took notice of before When we see the Law reacheth not only to the act but the aim not only to the words but the thoughts and secret motions of the heart Lord then who knows his errors The Law of God sometimes is said to be broad and sometimes narrow a broad Law Psal. 119. 96. Thy commandment is exceeding broad why broad because it reacheth to every motion every human action the words the thoughts the desires are under a Law nay yet more the imperfect and indeliberate motions of the soul are under a Law therefore the commandment is exceeding broad On the other side it is said to be narrow a strait gate and a narrow way Mat. 7. 14. why because it gives no allowance to corrupt nature we have but a straight line to go by So that we need regard our Rule 2. We are so ignorant in many particulars relating to faith and manners that we need often consult with our Rule The children of light have too much darkness in them therefore they are bidden to look to their Rule Eph. 5. 17. Be ye not unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is Blind consciences will easily carry us wrong and we have some new things still to learn from the word of God for knowledg is but in part therefore our Rule should be ever before us 3. So many and subtil are those temptations which Satan sets on foot to make us transgress this Rule The Devil assaults us two ways by fiery darts and by cunning wiles Eph. 6. 11. he hath not only violent temptations burning lusts or raging despair but he hath ensnaring temptations by his wiles such as most take with a person tempted and he transforms himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. covers his foul designs with plausible pretences therefore we need have our Rule and the word of God ever before us 4. We are weak and easily over-born and therefore should bear our Rule always in mind God's people their greatest sins have been out of incogitancy they sin oftenest because they are heedless and forgetful and unattentive Therefore as a Carpenter tries his work by his Rule and Square so should a Christian measure his conversation by the rod of the Sanctuary God whose act is his Rule cannot miscarry So the School-men when they set out God's holiness say God's hand is his Rule but we that are creatures are apt to swerve aside therefore need a Rule We should always have our rule before us We are to walk according to rule Gal. 6. and Josh. 1. 7 8. The book of the Law shall not depart from thee c. If we would have our Rule before our eyes we should not so often swerve Christians though you be right in opinion that will not bring you to Heaven but you must have the Rules of this holy profession before you USE O! then let the word of God be ever in sight as your Comforter and Counsellor the more we do so the more shall we walk in the fear of God You are not to walk according to the course of this world but according to Rule and therefore you are not to walk rashly and indeliberately and as you are led and carried on by force of present affections but to walk circumspectly considering what principle you are acted by and what ends and the nature and quality of our actions are always to be considered Remember you are under the eye of the Holy and Jealous God Iosh. 24. 9. and eyed by wicked men who watch for your halting Ier. 20. and eyed by weak Christians who may suffer for your careless and slight walking who look to the lives of men rather than their principles You are the lights of the world Matt. 5. 14. and light draws eyes after it you are as a city upon a hill You that pretend to be in the right way the way of truth will you walk carelesly and inordinately You are compassed about with snares there 's a snare in your refreshments Psal. 69. your estates may become a snare 1 Tim. 6. 9. your duties may become a snare Be not a novice lest you come into the condemnation of the devil 1 Tim. 3. Therefore take heed to your Rule be exact and watchful over your hearts and ways SERMON XXXIII PSAL. CXIX 31. I have stuck unto thy testimonies O Lord put me not to shame IN the former Verse David speaks of his choice I have chosen the way of truth then of the accurateness of his prosecution Thy judgments have I laid before me Now he comes to his constant perseverance therein I have stuck unto thy testimonies These two Verses follow one another in a very perfect order and coherence We must begin with a right choice there we must lay the foundation I have chosen the way of truth and then persevere There is a constancy in good and an obstinacy in evil The Devils sin
from the beginning as the good Angels continued in their first estate Men that are engaged in an evil course often continue in it without retractation they are no changelings always the same that 's no honour to them Luther when he was charged with apostasie for appearing against the Pope Confitetur se Apostatam esse sed beatum sanctum qui fidem Diabolo datam non servavit He confesseth he was an Apostate but a holy and blessed one that he did not keep touch with the Devil Constancy must ever be understood with respect to a right choice for to break faith with Satan is not matter of dishonour but of praise We must go on with an accurate prosecution for that giveth us experience and causeth us to find joy and sweetness and power in the truth and is a great means of constancy If men would be constant the next thing they must do is to practise that Religion they chuse and live under the power of it Holiness is a great means of constancy 1 Tim. 3. 9. Holding the mystery of faith in a pure conscience As precious liquors are best kept in clean vessels so is the mystery of faith in a pure conscience Men may be stubborn in their opinions out of natural courage and the engagement of credit and interests but this is of little worth without practical godliness their Orthodoxy and rightness in opinion will not bring them to heaven nor shall they be saved because they are of such a sect or party But then all must be closed up by persevering in our resolutions otherwise all our former zeal will be lost I have chosen the way of truth thy judgments have I laid before me and then now I have stuck unto thy testimonies O Lord put me not to shame 2 John 8. Look to your selves that ye lose not those things which ye have wrought All that a man hath done and suffered watching striving praying they come to nothing unless we stick to it and persevere Under the Law a Nazarite was to begin his days of separation again if he had defiled himself if he had separated himself for a year and kept his vow within two days of the year he was to begin all anew Numb 6. 12. and the interpretation of that type I cannot give you better than in the Prophets words Ezek. 18. 24. When the righteous turneth away from his righteousness and committeth iniquity all his righteousness that he hath done shall not be remembred When they turn head against their former profession it comes to nothing Thus you see what a perfect dependence there is between this Verse and the former In the words there is 1. A profession I have stuck unto thy testimonies 2. A prayer O Lord put me not to shame First For the profession I have stuck to thy testimonies Saith Chrysostom he doth not say I have followed thy testimonies but stuck or cleaved stuck so fast that nothing could remove him no difficulties tryals shakings he was still firm Doct. Those that have chosen the way of God and begin to conform their practice thereunto ought with all constancy to persevere therein First We have the same reasons to continue that we had to begin at first there 's the same loveliness in God's ways Christ is as sweet as ever Heaven is as good as ever if there be any difference there is more reason to continue than there was to begin why because we have more experience of the sweetness of Christ you knew him heretofore only by report and hearsay but now when you have walked in the way of holiness then you know him by experience and if you have tasted 1 Pet. 2. 2. then certainly you should not fall off afterwards Upon trial Christ is sweeter and the longer you have kept to conscience heaven is nearer and would a man miscarry and be discouraged when he is ready to put into the Haven Rom. 13. 11. Your salvation is nearer than when you first believed The nearer we are to the enjoyment of any good the more impatient in the want of it As natural motion we find swifter in the end because it 's nearer to the center but Violent motion is swiftest at first as when a stone is thrown upward it is swifter at first but when the impression of the external force is more spent then the motion is weaker It argues that you are not seriously through with God if you should break with him after some profession of his Name now your motion should be more earnest more strong towards him I speak this because we are so apt to cast off our first faith 1 Tim. 5. 12. and to lose our first love Rev. 2. 4. and to grow remiss and lazy and neglect our first works 2 Chron. 17. 3. Iehoshaphat is said to walk in the first ways of his father David We see many at the first are carried on with a great deal of affection and zeal and there are many promising beginnings of a very flourishing spring but yet they are no sure prognostications of a joyful harvest why consider with your selves we have the same reasons to continue as to begin yea much more as heaven is nearer In a marriage-relation true affection encreaseth but adulterous love is only hot while it is new If our hearts be upright with God we will encrease with zeal for his glory and love to his testimonies Secondly The danger and mischievous effects of apostasie and falling off that 's another reason why we should stick to his testimonies 1. It is more dishonourable to God than a simple refusal for you bring an ill report upon him as if he were not a good Master A wicked man that refuseth grace doth not so much dishonour God because his refusal is supposed to be the fruit of his prejudice but now you that cast him off after tryal your apostasie is supposed to be the fruit of your experience as if the Devil were a better Master when you have tried both you return to him again Tertullian in his Book de Poenitentia hath this saying After you have tried God you do as it were deliberately judg Satans service to be better or at least you do not find that in God you did expect Therefore the honour of God is mightily concerned and lies at stake when you fall off after you have seemed to begin with him with a great deal of accurateness And God pleads for himself and stands for his credit which seems to be wronged by this apostasie Ier. 2. 5. casting off his service for the Idols of the Nation What iniquity have your fathers sound in me that they are gone far from me And Mic. 6. 3. O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me What can you complain of God Is God hard to be pleased backward to reward What cause of distast have you found in him for implicitely you do as it were accuse him 2.
offence Christians what Religion is it you are of Is it not the Christian Religion whose great interest and work it is to draw you off from the concernments of the present world unto things to come The whole drift and frame of the Christian Religion is to draw mens hearts off from earthly things and to comfort and support them under the troubles inconveniences and molestations of the flesh therefore for a Christian to hope an exemption from them is to make the doctrine of the Gospel as incongruous and useless as to talk of bladders and the art of swimming to a man that never goes to sea nor intends to go off from the firm land 3. A great occasion to shake the faith of many is Scandals the evil practices of those that profess the name of God O! when they run into disorder especially into all manner of unrighteousness and iniquity and cruel things and make no conscience of the duties of their relations as subjects as children and the like it is a mighty offence and we that have to do with persons and sinners of all sorts find it a very hard matter to keep them from Atheism such stumbling blocks having been laid in their way Scandal's far more dangerous than Persecution There are many that have been gained by the patience courage and constancy of the Martyrs but never any were gained by the scandalous falls of professors Persecutions do only work upon our fear which may be allayed by proposal of the Crown of life but by scandalous actions how many settle into a resolved hardness of heart In crosses and persecutions a man may have secret likings of truth and a purpose to own it but by scandal She dislikes the way of God of Religion it self it begets a base and vile esteem thereof in the hearts of men so they are loose and fall off And this mischief doth not only prevail with the lighter sort of Christians but many times those which have had some taste it makes them fly off exceedingly Matt. 18. 7. There will be offences but wo be unto them by whom they come Christ hath told us all will not walk up to the Religion they own therefore we must stand out against this temptation Secondly Be fortified within by taking heed to the causes of apostasie and falling off from the truth either in judgment or practice What is there will make men apostates 1. Ungrounded assents A choice lightly made is lightly altered When we do not resolve upon evidence and have not taken up the ways of God upon clear light we shall turn and wind to and fro as the posture of our interest is changed First we must try all things then hold fast 1 Thes. 5. 21. Men waver hither and thither for want of solid rooting in truth they take up things hand over head and then like light chaff they are driven about with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4. 14. Half conviction leaveth us open to changes Iames 1. 8. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways A man that seems to have a faith concerning such a thing then seems to have a doubt concerning such a thing sometimes led by his faith at other times carried away by his doubts If we have not a clear and full perswasion of the ways of God in our own minds we shall never be constant 2. Want of solid rooting in grace that is rooted in faith Col. 2. 7. or rooted and grounded in Love Eph. 3. 17. as to both it is said Heb. 13. 9. It is a good thing that the heart be established with grace that is by a sound sense of the love of God in Christ. A sweet superficial tast may be lost but a sound sense of the love of God in Christ will engage us to him O! we have felt so much sweetness and have had such real proof of the goodness of Christ that all the world cannot take us off The more experience you have and the deeper it is the more you will be confirmed The most of us content our selves but in a superficial tast When we hear of the doctrine of salvation by Christ we are somewhat pleased and tickled with it but this is not that which doth establish us but a deep sense of God's grace or feeling the blood of Christ pacifying our Consciences this is that which establisheth our heart and setleth us against apostasie 3. Unmortified lusts which must have some error to countenance them By an inordinate respect to worldly interests we are sure to miscarry A man governed by lusts will be at uncertainty according as he is swayed by the fear or favour of men or his carnal hopes 2 Tim. 4. 10. Demas hath forsaken us having loved this present world If a man hath love to present things if that be not subdued and purged out of his heart he will never be stable never upright with God It may be he may stand when put upon some little self-denial for Christ he may endure some petty loss or some tender assault I but at length the man will be carried away as Ioab that turned after Adonijah though he turned not after Absolom 1 King 2. 28. there will some temptation come that will carry them away though at first they seem to stand their ground as long as lust remains unmortified in the heart 4. Sometimes a faulty-easiness As there is an ingenuous facility The wisdom that is from above is gentle and easie to be entreated Jam. 3. 17. so there 's a faulty easiness when men cannot say nay when they change their Religion with their company out of a desire to please all and Camelion-like they change colour with every object Some are of such a facile easie nature soon perswaded into great inconvenience This faulty-easiness always makes bold with God and conscience to please men when we are of this temper Jer. 38. 5. The King is not he that can do any thing against you It is not a good disposition but baseness and pusillanimity It is observed of Chrysostome though a good man in the main yet he ran into many inconveniences why because he was through simplicity and plainness of his nature easily to be wrought upon Therefore though a good man in regard of the sweetness of his temper and converse should be as a Load-stone yet he should be also resolute and severe in the things of God Paul though they did even break his heart they could not break his purpose 5. Self-confidence when we think to bear it out with natural courage and resolution as Peter did Though all men forsake thee yet will not I. We are soon over-born and a light temptation will do it God gives men over that trust in themselves For the Lord takes it to be his honour to be the Saints Guardian to keep the feet of his Saints 1 Sam. 2. 9. He will be owned and depended upon 6. There 's an itch of Novelty when men are weary of old truths and
full assurance of understanding The best have but a fluctuating doubting knowledge of spiritual Truths Not a full assurance and Perswasion of them Therefore we need to ask Establishment Thirdly consider the Utility and Profit of it when once the Word is established to us we shall know how to Live and how to Dye and upon what terms to maintain Comfort and Holiness whereas otherwise men Live loosly and carelesly 4. Heb. 2. The Word Profited not not being mixed with Faith in them that heard it Until the word of God be owned as it is a divine and infallible Truth it hath no Efficacy upon us When it is received meerly by Conjecture as a Possible truth it works but weakly I but then it profits when we receive the word of God as the Word of God as a certain truth when the soul comes to determine surely these are truths in which I am deeply concerned upon which my eternal Life or Death doth depend without this God can have no service and we no Comfort but are at a great uncertainty of Spirit On the other side let me tell you that all our Coldness in Duty and all our Boldness in sinning it comes from unbelief 1. Our Coldness in Duty What 's the reason when God offereth such great things to us as the eternal enjoyment of himself Glory Comfort and Happiness as much as heart can wish that men are so dead hearted liveless and careless in the ways of God when our work is so good our ways so Excellent what 's the reason of all our Coldness and Carelesness in the Profession of Religion We have not a lively Sense of Eternity we do not bellive God upon his word if we did it would put Life into us Saith the Apostle 3 Phil. 14. This one thing I mind and I press towards the work Why For the prize of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ. When we mind our work seriously and above all other things not superficially and by the By when we can see the prize of our high calling as to run and hold the eye upon the mark then he presseth onward that he may not lose the garland So when we feel the rewards of Grace when we are perswaded of them this puts Spirit into us and encourageth us against all deadness and faintness I press on ward then with a great deal of vehemency and earnestly So 1 Cor. 15. 58. Be ye stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord here is the description of a Godly man How shall we do to keep the heart in such an earnest frame By a sound Belief of the Promises for so it follows for as much as you know that your Labour shall not be in vain in the Lord If holiness doth not flourish there is a Worm at the Root Atheism and Unbelief lies at the heart and the want of such an assent to those great and glorious Promises which God hath made known to us in Christ. 2. Our boldness in sinning Why do men go on securely in ways of disobedience against God because they do not know whether the Word be true yea or no. If a man had Heaven and Hell in his Eye if he were soundly perswaded of these things certainly he would not venture the loss of Heaven for a trifle and would not upon such small temptations run the hazard of everlasting torments You cannot drive an ass the most stupid creature into the fire which is burning before his eyes So if these things were before our eyes we would not be so bold with God and so daring as we are Temptation to sin must needs prevail with us when we have not Faith for when the Temptation is strong and Faith weak where are we A man will yield to his base Lusts for there is present profit present pleasure and we have no undoubted certainty of the rewards of obedience and of the promises which are to be set against the Temptation But now when we consider we have so great and precious Promises this will make us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit we will not easily sin against God kick against the pricks and run upon danger laid before our eyes In vain is the snare laid in the sight of a Bird. Use 1. To reprove us for looking so little after the establishment of the Word There are many that content themselves with a loose profession of the name of Christ but are not established in a sound Belief of the Scriptures Ask them why they are of this and that Religion They have been taught so been brought up in it and so they might have been Mahometans upon the same account that they are Christians if they had been bred there where the name of Mahomet is of more request than the name of Christ. But then there are others that live by guess and carry on some natural Devotion but their Souls were never acquainted with the mystery of Grace never soundly established in it they have a conjecture There are others that can dispute for their Religion that see a reasonableness in the Christian Faith and why they should be of this Opinion rather than that I but their hearts were never subdued to God Hath the Spirit established Divine truths upon thy Soul and wrought these things upon thy heart hath it convinced thy Judgment awakned thy Conscience changed thy heart given thee any taste of Gods love in Christ drawn thee out of the World into near and sweet Communion with God truths are by him establisht to us and represented with evidence and power 1 Cor. 2. 4. Alas all else we can attain to is but cold and fruitless notion which will not warm the heart some cursory opinions that will not hold thy heart under the awe of God and guide thee in the paths of Holiness to eternal Life and therefore rest not in this that you have some knowledge concerning Christ and priviledges by him But are your hearts established have you a sence of these truths wrought in you by the Holy Ghost Use 2. It exhorteth us to use the means whereby the Word may be established 1. Chiefly observe Experiences how it is accomplished in the course of Gods Providence and inward feeling of thy own heart What answers of Prayer have you when you have been wrestling with God and putting his Promises in Suit at the Throne of Grace Every day God is fulfilling one Promise or another to train us up to look for more at his hands That we may trust him for our Inheritance and our final Blessing he first giveth us a proof of his Truth in lesser matters The more you observe the dealings of God with your own Souls and the fulfilling his Word to you the more will your heart be confirmed against Atheism and established in the belief of the Divine Authority of the Scripture It concerns us much to look to this that our hearts be firmly setled against Atheism especially when
a-going as Christ saith I know whence I am and whither I goe They look altogether for the present and if they be well for the present they are contented Alas in what a miserable Case are these Men though they mind it not they seem to me to be like Men that are going to Execution A Man that is going to the Gallows for the present is well hath a great Guard to attend him an innumerable multitude of People to follow him you would think that hardly could a Man be such a Sot and Fool as to think all this should be done for his Honour and not for his Punishment and should onely consider how he is accompanied but not whither he goeth Many such Fools there are in the World that onely consider how they are attended and provided for but never consider whither they are a-going Oh Wretch whither goest thou may we say to one that should pride himself in the resort of Company to his Execution dost thou not see thou art led to Punishment and after an hour or two these will leave thee hanging and perishing infamously as the just reward of thine Offences So many that shine now in the pomp and splendour of worldly Accommodations and are merry and jocund as if all would doe well alas poor Creatures whither are they a-going Iob 21. 12 13. They take the Timbrel and the Harp and rejoyce at the sound of the Organ they spend their days in wealth and in a moment go down into Hell Ye still live and are going to Punishment but mind it not but your Wealth and Honours and Servants and Friends will all leave you to your own doom and yet you are merry and jocund as if your Journey would never end or not so dismally as if you were hastening to a Kingdom and not to an eternal Prison one moment puts an end to all their Joy for ever 2. There are others that wean their hearts from this World and make it their Care that they may carry themselves becoming their celestial Extraction as their Souls were from above by Creation so all their Hopes and Desires and Endeavours are to attain to that Region of Spirits much more as being renewed by Grace do they aim at the Perfection and Accomplishment of that Life which is begun in them and so being made partakers of the Divine nature do they escape the Corruption that is in the world through Lust 2 Pet. 1 4. they are convinced of a better Estate than the World yieldeth and believe it and look for it and long for it and labour for it Now of which number are you or if you cannot decide that because more goeth to the assuring of our Interest than the World usually taketh to be necessary for that end and purpose of which number do you mean to be will you be at home in the World or seek the happiness of the World to come that is in other terms do you mean to be Pagans under a Christian name or Christians indeed you have but the name if you be not Strangers and Pilgrims here upon Earth All Christ's Disciples indeed are called to sit loose from the World and to have an high and deep sense of the World to come as to the other World they are no mere Strangers and Foreigners but fellow Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God Eph. 2. 19. They are of a Family part of which is in Heaven and part on Earth Eph. 3. 15. of whom the whole Family in Heaven and Earth are named some of their Brethren have got the start of them and are with God before them but the rest are hastening after as fast as they can They are sufficiently convinced that the Earth is no place for them they are strangers there and the contentments thereof uncertain and perishing but they are no strangers to Heaven and the blessed Society of the Saints whose privileges they have a full right to now and hope one day to have as full a Possession and an intimate Communion with their Father and all their Brethren Now that you may resolve upon this and carry your selves sutably I shall 1. Give you some Motives 2. A Direction or two 1. Motives 1. He that taketh up his Rest in this World or any earthly thing is but an higher kind of Beast and unworthy of an immortal Soul The Beasts have an instinct that guideth them to seek things convenient for that Life which they have and therefore a man doth not follow the Light of Reason that seeketh to quiet his mind with what things the World affordeth and onely relisheth the contentments of the carnal and bodily Life that is satisfied with his Portion here Psalm 17. 14. All their business and bustle is to have their wills and pleasure for a little while as if they had neither hopes nor fears of any greater things hereafter Psalm 49. 20. Man that is in honour and void of understanding is as the beast that perisheth because he meerly inclineth to present satisfactions for Reason is as a middle thing between the Life of Faith and the Life of Sense it were no great matter whether you were Men or Dogs or Swine if Reason be onely given you for the present World and present satisfactions all your Sense of the World to come and Conscience is as good as nothing 2. None are of so noble and Divine a Spirit as those that seek the heavenly Kingdom Amongst men the Ambitious who aspire to Crowns and Kingdoms that aim at perpetual Fame by their Vertues and rare Exploits are judged Persons of greater Gallantry than Covetous muck-worms and bruitish Epicures yet their highest thoughts and designs are very base in comparison of Christians who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for Life Glory and Immortality Rom. 2. 7. and whom nothing less will content than the injoyment of God himself Their desires are after him Psalm 73. 25. whom have I in Heaven but thee and who is there on Earth I desire besides thee So that as Man being immortal should provide for some place of perpetual abode so herein the Christian excelleth other men that nothing less will satisfie him than what God hath promised his People hereafter The Threshold will not content him nothing but the Throne 3. What a sorry Immortality mock Eternity do they choose instead of the true one when they neglect the pursuit of this heavenly Country If they look no higher than this World all that they can rationally imagine is perpetuating Themselves and their Names and Posterity by successive Generations Psalm 49. 11. Their inward thought is that their Houses shall continue for ever and their Dwelling-places to all Generations they call their Lands by their own names This is styled Nodosa Aeternitas when they live in their Children after death but alas to how few mens share can this fall and those who may in likelihood expect it who are Lords of fair Rents fair Lands Houses and Heritages how
would create Pain Use 2. Of Exhortation To press us if we would have God for our God then to seek his Favour above all things Wait with an affectionate earnestness in every Ordinance for some new Discovery some comfortable intimation of God's Word Psal. 130. 6. My Soul waiteth for thee what for outward Deliverances No but I wait for the Lord and in his Word do I hope Again in every Enjoyment it is not enough to have the Creature with God's leave so can all men have it 't is their Portion but you must have it with God's Love as a token from God wrapt up in the Bowels of Christ. God gives many Gifts to wicked Men but doth not give them his Love This we should look after that we may find our Comforts to be sprinkled with Love that if God deliver you out of any strait he may love you out of it Isa. 38. 17. II. For the manner I have sought thy Favour how with my whole heart Note Doct. When we pray for the Favour of God it must be with our whole heart There is this intended in it 1. The constant Favour and Presence of God we must pray for it for without Prayer Faith lies idle Heb. 4. 16. 2. They that pray for it their Hearts must be set upon what they pray It is not enough that our Tongues babble out a cold Form as many learn to pray as Parots speak by rote they say not pray a Prayer Iames 5. 17. Elias prayed earnestly in the Margent and so in the Original he prayed in Prayer A Man may take up words of course and say things after others which are not indeed the real desires of his Heart so they pray as if they prayed not slightly without any warmth and affection 3. It is not enough that our Hearts concur but our whole Hearts must goe along with this Work Many times we pray but with half a Heart 1. Partly when Prayer is a fruit of memory and invention but not the fruit of Conscience Common Illumination will tell us how Prayer is to be formed according to the Tenor of the Christian Faith so men may repeat words such as the Understanding judgeth fit without any answerable touch upon the Heart This is their Sin who are more carefull about Notions in Prayer than the Affections 2. A Man prays but with a piece of his Heart when he prays rather with his Conscience than with his Affections Will you distinguish this a dictate of Conscience must be distinguished from a purpose of Heart Conscience may tell us what is to be done yet the Heart have no liking to it Austin saith when he was a carnal Man he had some kind of Conscience and pray'd against his Sins but saith he I was afraid God would hear me The Favour of God is necessary but the Heart many times is not ingaged in the pursuit of it We oftner pray from our Memories than our Consciences and oftner from our Consciences than our Affections the Heart is not put into the Duty 3. When our Affections are divided to carnal Things and the comfortable part of spiritual Things No doubt there is no man but would have the Favour of God but it is with a condition that he may live as he does and be as he is and so the prevailing part of his Soul bends him to his present course he regards Iniquity in his Heart and Sin hath an Interest and lies very near he would have the Favour of God abtractedly but when he considers how his Lusts must be parted with there his Heart is divided Use O then look to it that you beg the Lords Favour with all your hearts God knows the Heart Rebeckah drest up Iacob so that his Father mistook him I but God cannot mistake his Eye is not dim as Isaac's he sees the Heart therefore let your Heart and whole Heart go out in the pursuit Quest. How shall we know when our Hearts are thus throughly bent if you seek him with all your Hearts Answ. Then you will observe how you speed when you look after him you will see what becomes of your requests I will hearken what God will speak saith David and will pray and look up as Elijah looked up to see the Cloud a-coming Again If we pray with the whole Heart there will be importunate arguings Desire will take no nay Psal. 63. 8. My Soul followeth hard after thee O it will be a painfull grievous thing to your Souls if you do not speed in your Prayers Not a slight motion or cold wish but such as deeply affects the Heart and not easily put off and satisfied with other things Wicked Men would have the Favour of God but they are easily put out of the humour Again then we pray with the whole Heart when there is such a desire as not to be discouraged but you venture again when the Lord seems to put off and give a check to your requests Isa. 22. 8. The desire of our Soul is to thy Name and to the remembrance of thee Still Desires grow hotter and hotter and when there 's a kind of impudence not to be put off Again such as does excite endeavours for the obtaining of God's Love and a sense of his Favour It will cost us pain and trouble when we are hard at work and will be diligent in this thing But when you rest in a few cold Prayers you are never hearty with God Psal. 27. 4. One thing have I desired what then that will I seek after and use a great deale of diligence to come by it III. The Fountain of all that we expect is Mercy All that seek God's Favour must expect it upon terms of Grace Be mercifull unto me We cannot say pay me what thou owest or give me for my money All whom God accepts to his Grace and Favour are unworthy Isa. 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money come ye buy and eat come buy Wine and Milk without money and without price Secondly They who are received to Favour still need Mercy to pardon Failings Gal. 5. The best are but Sanctified in part and have the dregs of Corruption always remaining and frequently stirring in them Use Let us thus deale with God Hosea 14. 3. Take with you words and turn to the Lord say unto him Take away all iniquity and receive us graciously The summe of all our Requests is that God would be mercifull to us IV. The Rule and Ground of Confidence is according to thy Word God's Word is the Rule of our Confidence for therein is God's stated Course If we would have Favour from God and Mercy it must be upon his own Terms God will accept of us in Christ if we repent believe and obey and seek his Favour diligently he will not deny those who seek aske knock We would have Mercy but will not observe God's Directions We must aske according to God's Will not without
together and find their own perswasions of the love power mercy and wisdome of God backed with the experience and testimony of others 't is a mutual strength and support to us and therefore the Apostle saith Rom. 1. 12. That I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith of you and me When we converse with them that can speak not by hearsay onely but experience of the power of the blood of Christ in purifying their Consciences and his Spirit to sanctifie their hearts 't is a mighty prop 2 Cor. 1. 4. And that we may comfort others with the comforts wherewith we are comforted of God Report of a report is a cold thing not valued but a report of what we witness and experience our selves comes warmly upon our hearts Nay many times it may fall out that people of less knowledge but more feeling experience may abundantly confim the more knowing and excite them to a greater mindfulness of God and heavenly things But alas the meetings of carnal Persons what is it to this It may be they will fill your ears with stories of Hawking and Hunting the best Wine and delicious meats of Honours and Purchases in the World all which tend but to increase the gust of the flesh and the carnal favour which is banefull to us or else with idle stories the clatter of vanity which are impertinent to our great end or else about the World thriving in the World nothing about those high and excellent and necessary things of the grace of God in Christ and the truth of the promises and the glory of the world to come Psal. 37. 30 31. The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom and his tongue talketh of judgment the Law of God is in his heart none of his steps shall slide and the mouth of the righteous is as choice silver they have a sense of better things but alas from others you hear nothing but unsavory vanity which is as different from the discourse of the Children of God as the melody of a Bird from the grunting of a Hog or Swine SERMON LXXXIII PSAL. CXIX 75. I know O Lord that thy Iudgments are right and that in faithfulness thou hast afflicted me WE have need all to prepare for afflictions for we are to take up our Cross daily now to help you to a right Carriage under them these words well considered will be of some use to you they are the confession of an humble Soul abundantly satisfied with Gods dispensations In them observe 1. A general truth or point of Doctrine concerning the equity of Gods Judgments thy Iudgments O Lord are right 2. A particular application or accommodation of this truth to Davids case and person in faithfulness thou hast afflicted me 3. His sure and firm perswasion of both I know Let us explain these branches and parts of the Text as they are laid forth 1. The generall truth the Lords Judgments are right In which proposition there is the Subject and the Predicate The Subject or things spoken are the Lords Judgments The word is often put in this Psalm and elsewhere for Gods Statutes or precepts or righteous Laws and in this sense some take it here and make out the sense thus Lord I know that thy Iudgments viz. thy Precepts are holy just and good and this perswasion is not lessened in me though thou hast sharply afflicted me I have as great a value and esteem for thy Word as ever But rather by the Lords Judgments are meant the passages of his Providence as the latter clause sheweth those judiciall dispensations whereby he doth punish the wicked or correct his Children And let it not seem strange that the troubles and afflictions of the Godly should be called Judgments for though there be no vindictive wrath in them yet they are called so upon a double reason partly because they are acts of Gods holy Justice correcting and humbling his people for sin according to the Sentence of his word thus it is said 1 Pet. 4. 17. That Iudgment shall begin at the house of God where the Trials and Troubles of the Godly are plainly called Judgments And partly because the Lord judiciously measureth and directeth them as the state of his Children requireth and their strength will bear so 't is said Ier. 10. 24. Correct me but in Iudgment The first Notion implyeth Gods Justice the second his Wisdome And mark 't is said distinctly in the Text thy Iudgments O Lord his enemies might unjustly persecute him but thy Iudgments so far as the Lord hath a hand in it all was just and right this is the Subject or thing spoken of Secondly Here is the predicate or what is said of it are right the Heb. Tsedec the Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are righteousness it self thy dispensations are wholly made up of perfect Justice how smart soever they be they are right as to the Cause right as to the measure right as to the end The first of these respects concerneth Gods Justice the two other his Wisdome First right as to the Cause they never exceed the value of their Impulsive Iob 34. 23. He will not lay upon man more than is right that he should enter into judgment with him God never afflicteth his People above their desert nor gives any just occasion to commence a Sute against his Providence Secondly right as to the Measure not above the strength of the Patient In his own Peoples Afflictions it is so Isa. 27. 8. In measure when it shouteth forth thou wilt debate it he stayeth his rough wind in the day of the east wind God dealeth with his own with much moderation meting out their Sufferings in due proportion So Ier. 30. 11. I will correct thee in measure Thirdly right as to their end and use God knoweth how to strike in the right Vein and to suit his Providence to the purpose for which it is appointed the kind of the Affliction is to be considered as well as the Measure the Lord chuseth that Rod which is most likely to doe his work Paul had a Thorn in the Flesh that he might not be exalted above measure 2 Cor. 12. 7. he was a man inured to dangers and troubles from without these were familiar to him therefore he could the better bear them but God would humble him by some pain in the Flesh which should sit near and close 2. The particular Accommodation of it to David in faithfulness thou hast afflicted me Pray mark in the general Case he observeth Justice in his own faithfulness The Book called Midrash Tillim referreth these words to David's flight from Absalom when he went to Mount Olivet weeping 't was an ill time then with David he had no security then for his Life being driven from his house and home He went up Mount Olivet going and weeping 2 Sam. 15. 30. then when so great and ●…sore trouble was upon him then he saith I know that in faithfulness thou hast afflicted me Mark
the Emphasis he doth not barely acknowledge that God was faithfull though or notwithstanding he had afflicted him but faithfull in sending them Affliction and Trouble are not onely consistent with God's Love plighted in the Covenant of Grace but they are parts and branches of the New Covenant-Administration God is not onely faithfull notwithstanding Afflictions but faithfull in sending them There is a difference between these two the one is like an exception to the Rule quoe firmat regulam in non exceptis the other makes it a part of the Rule God cannot be faithfull without doing all things that tend to our good and eternal Welfare the conduct of his Providence is one part of the Covenant-Ingagement as to pardon our sins and sanctify us and give us glory at the last so to suit his Providence as our need and profit requireth in the way to Heaven 'T is an act of his Sovereign Mercy which he hath promised to his People to use such discipline as conduceth to their safety In short the Cross is not onely an exception to the grace of the Covenant but a part of the grace of the Covenant The meaning is God is obliged in point of fidelity to send sharp Afflictions Psal. 89. 32. I will visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Sharp Rods and sore Stripes not onely may stand and be reconciled with God's loving kindness and truth but they are effects and expressions of it 't is a part of that transaction viz. his Covenant-Love 3. The third thing to be explained is his sense of these Truths I know Knowing implies clearness of apprehension and firmness of perswasion so that I know is I fully understand or else I am confident or well assured of this truth But from whence had David his Knowledge how knew he all God's Judgments to be right not from the Flesh or from natural Sense no the Flesh is importunate to be pleased will perswade us the contrary If we consult onely with natural Sense we shall never believe that when God is hacking and hewing at us he intendeth our good and benefit and that when sore Judgments are upon us his end is not to destroy but to save to mortify the Sin and save the Person Sense will teach us no such thing but will surely misinterpret and misexpound the Lord's dealings For the Peace of God is a riddle to a natural Heart Phil. 4. 7. Whence then had David his Knowledge partly from the Word of God and partly from his own observation and particular experience 1. From the Word of God for 't is a maxime of Faith that God can doe no wrong That he is righteous in all his ways and just in all his works Psal. 145. 17. And again Deut. 32. 4. He is the rock his work is perfect for all his ways are judgment and truth and without iniquity just and right is he These are undeniable Truths revealed in the Word of God and must satisfy us whatsoever Sense saith to the contrary the causes and ends of God's particular Judgments are sometimes secret but they are always just Psal. 97. 2. Clouds and darkness are round about him but righteousness and truth are the habitation of his throne Therefore when we see not the reason of God's particular Dispensations we must believe the righteousness and goodness of them 2. David knew by his own observation and particular experience he had much studied his own Heart and considered his own ill deservings and Soul distempers and therefore saw the Lord's Discipline was necessary for him We should better understand God's work and sooner justify him both in point of justice and faithfulness if we did use more observation and did consider what need and profit there is of Affliction Tribulation worketh experience Rom. 5. 4 5. We see what need there was of Affliction and how seasonable the Lord's work was This is a more sensible way of knowledg than the former Faith is a surer ground but spiritual Observation hath its benefit Natural Conscience doth represent our guilt but experience sheweth God's faithfulness how seasonably God took us in our Month and suited his Providence to our present Condition Doct. That it would much quiet the minds of the people of God about all the sad dispensations of his Providence if they would seriously consider the justice and faithfulness of them So did David silence all his murmurings when the hand of God was sore upon him so should we silence all our murmuring all our suspicions of God's dealing when we are under the Cross. I know the Lord doth nothing unjust but is faithfull he will not retract his Covenant-Love and I know his Covenant-Love binds him to lay on us seasonable Affliction and Correction I shall doe two things First Illustrate the Point by some Considerations Secondly Shew that there is much of justice and faithfulness in all the Troubles and Afflictions of God's People Consider 1. We are not onely to grant in the general that God's Judgments are right but that he hath in faithfulness afflicted us So doth David when the stroke of God was heavy upon himself Many will assert the Righteousness of God when they speak to others in their Afflictions but do not indeed justify him in the Afflictions that come upon themselves We are hasty to censure but backward to humble our own Souls before God they will give him the praise of his Justice when he chasteneth others but think God dealeth harshly and rigorously with them when his Scourge is upon their own backs Such a difference is there between Knowledge speculative and experimental between that Conscience which we have in others Concernments and that Knowledge which self-love giveth us in our own David here doth not onely own the general Truth but sees God's faithfulness when the stroke lighted upon himself So Iob 4. 3 4 5. you shall see this was objected to Iob that he could comfort others but now the hand of God was upon him his Soul fainted They that stand upon the shore may easily say to those that are in the midst of the Waves and conflicting for life or death Sail thus When we are well we give Counsel to the sick but if we were so how would we take it our selves So can we say patiently all is just and keep silence to God Consider 2. We must not onely grant this truth that God is faithfull when at ease but when under the sharpest and smartest Discipline We use to praise God in prosperity but we should bless him also when he seemeth to deal hardly with us speak good of God when under the Rod. When we view a Cross at a distance or in the doctrinal contemplation of this Truth we say that God may exercise us with the greatest evil and that we need these methods to bring us to Heaven but when Afflictions come thick and near and close and we are deprived of our nearest and dearest Comforts Credit Liberty Health Life
this sound heart that doth inseparably cleave to God in all things 1 Chron. 22. 19. Now set your hearts to seek the Lord God of your fathers This is the Obediential Bent when the heart is set and fixed so David speaketh of it Psal. 119. 112. I have inclined my heart to perform thy statutes always to the end When the heart is poized this way not compelled by outward force but inclined and this always not by fits and starts Many have good motions and temporize a little but their righteousness is like the morning dew Many approve what is good and condemn themselves for not doing of it but their hearts are not inclined nay further they can wish it were better with them but the heart is not swayed and over-powred by Grace Here is the ground of a cheerful Uniform and constant Obedience when we do not force our selves now and then to good actions but the heart hath an habitual tendency that way Fourthly There is required that the affections be purged and quickned these are the vigorous motions of the Will and therefore this must be heedfully regarded purged they must be from that carnality and fleshliness that cleaveth to them This is called in Scripture the circumcision of the heart Deut. 30. 6. The Lord thy God shall circumcise thy heart to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy mind that thou may'st live 'T was figured in the cutting of the fore-skin or the circumcision of the flesh which because it was an action done with pain sometimes noteth the humbling of the heart and soul affliction Lev. 26. 41. But because it was done not only with pain but the fore-skin was cut off so it noteth the purging the heart from that fleshliness and carnality that cleaveth to us Acts 15. 9. Purifying their hearts by faith Sin is wrought out more and more by the blood of Christ applied to the Conscience And sometimes this is expressed in Scripture by plowing up the fallow ground Jer. 4. 4. There are perverse inclinations like Bryars and Thorns that grow in us and the strength of vile affections now unless these be abated and broken we shall soon be transported by them 'T is an allusion to ground broken up for tillage till the ground be plowed and the noisom weeds destroyed the good seed will not grow 2dly the affections must be quickned acted and set a work by the love of God Gal. 5. 6. Prepared ready to serve the Lord Eph. 2. 20. Amor meus est pondus meum Love and delight in God's ways go together Thus much of the nature of the sound heart Secondly Let me now come to shew you the value and worth of this Priviledge 't is a great blessing that will appear by two things 1. The Respect that God hath to it 2. The Evil it freeth us from That I be not ashamed 1. The Respect that God hath to it This is the thing that God delights in and looks after 1 Chron. 29. 17. I know also my God that thou triest the heart and hast pleasure in uprightness He can discern integrity and preferreth it before all manner of service and pomp in worship that is yielded to him Now this delight of God is not only in the thing itself in the uprightness but in the persons of the upright upon account of their uprightness so Prov. 11. 20. The upright is his delight That person that is upright for the main though otherwise he hath many failings is of great esteem with God But can the holy God delight in any of the sinful sons of Adam Before the Fall God rejoiced in us as in the work of his hands but since Sin marr'd us and defiled us how can God take pleasure in us The love of good Will may fall upon sinful unworthy Creatures but the love of Complacency cannot fall upon these A fit Object the Sinner is not and exactly perfect none can be there is therefore a middle person the upright and sincere man And this delight of God passeth from the person to his actions The prayer of the upright is his delight Prov. 15. 8. Alas our Prayers are as our Persons poor slender things at the best yet a little findeth acceptance with God 't is welcome for the person's sake who is accepted in Christ. Now how will God manifest this delight in his Providence 2 Chron. 16. 9. The eyes of the Lord run to and fro that he may shew himself strong in the behalf of those whose hearts are upright with him He looks up and down in the world to find out such persons to do them good that he may employ all his power and grace for them so God shews it in his Word God's work is to assure them of a blessing Micah 2. 7. Do not my words do good to them that walk uprightly There he comforts and strengthens and revives their hearts He doth not only speak good but doth good to them that walk uprightly Nay that 's not all but by his Spirit and internal Grace he doth more encourage them and renew strength upon them in their way to Heaven Prov. 10. 29. The way of the Lord is strength to the upright The more they walk with God the more easie and sweet they find it so to do So that if all these Promises will encourage us we had need to look after this sound heart What honor and esteem soever others purchase with men these obtain favor with the Lord and are more regarded in all his dispensations 2. Let us come to the evil it freeth us from in the argument of the Text That I may not be ashamed They whose hearts are not sound with God one time or other they shall be put to shame but others shall be kept from this effect which is so grievous to nature Let me open this A man may be ashamed either before God or men our selves or others First Before God either in our addresses to him at the Throne of Grace or when summoned to appear at the last day before the Tribunal of his Justice 1. If you understand it of our present approach to him we cannot come into his presence with confidence if we have not a sound heart 1 John 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not then have we boldness towards God We lose that holy familiarity and chearfulness when we are unbosoming our selves to our heavenly Father when our hearts are not sound An unsound heart through the consciousness of its own guilt groweth shie of God and stands aloof from him and hath no pleasure in his company But when we sincerely set our selves to keep a good conscience in all things we have this liberty towards God though our failings humble us yet they do not weaken our confidence of our Father's mercy St Paul thought himself a fit object of others Prayers upon this account Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good conscience willing in all things
upon God Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And Psal. 23. 4. Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me thy rod and thy staff they comfort me Many of his Children are reduced to great straits there may be no meal in the Barrel nor oil in the Cruse before God helpeth them There may be many mouths to eat little Food Iohn 6. 5 6. when there was a great deal of company and little provision Christ asketh one of his Disciples Whence shall we buy bread that these may eat And this he said to prove him for he himself knew what he would do So many a poor Believer is put to it Children increase Trading groweth dead Supplies fail What shall they do They pray and God giveth no answer This he doth to prove them 'T is a strong Faith which can hold out in such straits and difficulties 2dly To awaken our Importunity Luke 18. 1. And he spake a parable to them to this end that men ought always to pray and not to faint compared with Luke 11. 8. with the Parable ensuing So again an instance in the Woman of Canaan she turneth discouragements into arguments When Christ said It is not meet to take the childrens bread and to cast it to dogs She said Truth Lord yet the dogs eat of the crums which fall from their masters table Mat. 15. 26 27. So the blind men Mat. 20. 31. the more they were rebuked cryed the more rather than his People shall neglect Prayer or grow formal in it God will cast them into great Afflictions as Christ suffereth the Storm to continue till the Ship was almost overwhelmed that his Disciples might awaken him Mat. 8. 25. 3dly To make us sensible of our weakness as Paul 2 Cor. 1. 9. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead We are much given to self-confidence therefore God will break it and e're he hath done with us make us trust in him alone There is a twofold strength Natural and Spiritual 1. Natural which ariseth from that Courage that is in Man as he is a reasonable Creature This will hold out till all probabilities be spent Prov. 18. 14. The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can bear Till a Man be struck at the heart his reason will support him 2. Spiritual Faith Hope Patience These may be spent when the Affliction is deep and pressing and God's help is long delay'd Faith is the strength of the Soul as Faith decayeth or is tired the Soul faints Faith may be damped and give up our case for gone Psal. 116. 11. Psal. 31. 22. They throw up all and think it is in vain to wait any longer Thus will God discover our weakness to our selves the weakness of our Reason the weakness of our Faith I remember Solomon saith Prov. 34. 10. If thou faintest in adversity thy strength is small Grievous or long Afflictions discover our strength or weakness Some are of a poor spirit give up at first assault before their strength faileth them before the probabilities which Sense and Reason offereth are spent They are lazy and love their ease Some are negligent do not make use of the helps of Faith but when evils continue long and sit close the strongest Faith is seen to be too weak God by this will humble us 4thly God doth this for his own glory and that his work may be the more remarkable and conspicuous John 12. 6 7. Iesus loved Lazarus and when he heard that he was sick he abode two days still in the same place where he was Little love in that you will say a Man would hasten to his dying Friend Christ may dearly love his own and yet delay to help them even in their extremity till the fit time come wherein the mercy may be the more conspicuous 'T is said Eccles. 3. 11. God hath made every thing beautiful in his time Before its time God's work seemeth harsh and rough as a Statue when it is first hewn out but in its time t is a curious piece of workmanship God in his own time and way knoweth best how to comfort his People 2. 'T is the Devil's design to tire and weary out the People of God and therefore stirreth up all his malice against us Luke 22. 31 32. Simon Simon behold Satan hath desired to have you that he may sift you as wheat But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not The Devil if he might have the shaking of us and liberty to do his worst he would drive us from the faith of Christ and all hopes by him 3. Men are unreasonable in their oppositions and will not relent nor abate any thing of their rigor Zech. 1. 15. I was a litte displeased and they helped forward the affliction They are still adding to the Churches trouble and would destroy those whom God would only correct and purge as the Slave layeth on unmercifully Till God restrain it their wrath never ceaseth Well then 1 USE Let it not seem strange to us That Godly Men in their Afflictions though they flie to God and implore his Mercy are not presently delivered nor always at the first instance God hath many discoveries to make much work to do Would you have Faith rewarded before it be tryed or the beautiful frame and link of causes disturbed for your sakes Faith is not tryed to purpose till the thing we believe is not seen nor have any probability that ever we shall see it yea till we see nothing but the contrary and hope against hope we must stay till the mercy be ready for us and we ready for it an hungry Stomach would have the Meat e're it be roasted our times are always present with us when God's time is not come 2. Let us prepare for grievous and tedious Sufferings We would turn over our hard Lesson before we have sufficiently learned it we love the case of the flesh would have no Cross or a very short one Things will not be so soon or so suddenly effected as we imagine We make greater provision for a long Voyage We should be strengthned to long-suffering Col. 1. 11. as for all sort of Crosses so for long and tedious Crosses 3. If our Affliction be long observe your carriage under it Doth Faith and Hope keep you alive still Heb. 6. 12. Be not slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises Do you keep up your prayerful affections Rom. 12. 12. Continue instant in prayer We pray as Men out of heart for fashions sake and with little life rather satisfying our Consciences than expressing our hope and confidence A damp on the Spirit of Prayer is an ill Presage Can you love God though you be not feasted with Self-comforts and present Benefits
who value all things in order to the chief good and have weaned their hearts from the false happiness they have their end if they be brought nearer to God though by a bitter and sharp means First Use Is Reproof to four sorts 1. To those that know no comfort but what ariseth from the enjoyments of sense Alas these comforts are dreggy and base and leave a taint upon the soul Iude 19. Again they leave us destitute when we most need comfort Iob 27. 8. When other comforts forsake us and have spent their allowance the comforts of the Word abide with us Again these comforts increase our grief though for a time they seem to mitigate and allay it They are like strong waters that warm the stomach for the present but destroy the true temper and natural heat of it and leave it the colder afterwards they chear us a little but the end of that mirth is heaviness Oh! how much better are the comforts of God's Word which giveth us matter of joy in the saddest condition and do not only save us from desperation in troubles but make us rejoice in tribulation and can bring pleasure to us in our bitterest afflictions there are breasts of consolation for every distressed creature to suck at and be saved 2. It reproves them that think Philosophy as good or a better Institution than Christianity Certainly we should own the wisdom of God by what hand soever it is conveyed to us as Elijah refused not his meat though brought by Ravens But when this is done by men of a profane wit in a contempt of God we must convince them of their dangerous error and mistake and shew how compleat we are in Christ that we be not spoiled by the Rudiments of vain Wisdom or Philosophy Col. 2. 8. Surely God's comforts have greatest authority over the Conscience to silence all our murmurings Psal. 94. 19. Man speaks to us by the evidence of Reason but in Scripture God himself speaks to us and impawneth his Truth with us to do us good they knew not the true cause of trouble sin nor the true remedy Jesus Christ And surely those great mysteries of Christ as Procurer of Comfort the Spirit as the Applier Heaven as the Matter the Word as the Warrant Faith as the Means to receive all these are a more accommodate means to settle the Conscience than those little glimmerings of light which refined nature discovered They speak of submitting out of necessity little of reducing the heart to God and their very Doctrines for comfort were rather a Libel against Providence than a sure ground of peace and tranquility of mind and they taught men to eradicate the affections rather than to govern and quiet them and therefore keep up your Reverence to the Scriptures A Seneca may speak things more neatly and to the gust of carnal fancy but not with greater power and efficacy this is reserved for the Word 3. It reproves them that undervalue the consolations laid down in the Word as if they were but slender empty and unsatisfactory and would have some singular and extraordinary way of getting comfort Iob 15. 11. Are the consolations of God small with thee Is there any secret thing with thee God's ordinary way is the sure way the other layeth us open to a snare therefore they who undervalue the ordinary comforts of the Word obtained in a way of Faith and Repentance and close walking with God as Naaman undervalued the waters of Iordan and would have signs and wonders to comfort them they may long sit in darkness because if God comfort them not in their way they will not be comforted at all Now though God hath sometimes in condescension to his people granted them their desires as to Thomas yet it is with an upbraiding of their weakness and unbelief Iohn 20. 28. We should acquiesce in the common allowance of God's people lest we seem to reflect on the wisdom and goodness of God and lay open our selves to some false consolation and dream of comfort while we affect new means without the compass of the Word especially when we find not our expectations there speedily answered like hasty Patients readier to tamper with every new Medicine they hear of than submit to a regular course of Physick Gregory tells us of a Lady of the Emperor's Court that never ceased importuning of him to seek from God a Revelation from Heaven that she should be saved He answers Rem difficilem inutilem postulas It was a thing difficult and unprofitable difficult for him to obtain unprofitable for her to ask having a surer way by the Scriptures 2 Pet. 1. 19. than Oracles the adhering of the Soul to the promises is the unquestionable way to obtain a sound peace Luther as he confesseth was often tempted to ask a sign of the pardon of his sins or some special Revelation he tells also how strongly he withstood these Temptations Pactum feci cum Domino meo ne mihi mittat visiones vel somnia vel etiam angelos contentus enim sum hoc dono quod habeo Scripturam sanctam quae abunde docet suppeditat omnia quae necessaria sunt tam ad hanc vitam tam ad futuram I indented with the Lord my God that he would never send me dreams and visions I am well contented with the gift of the Scriptures 4. It shews how much they are to blame that are under a Scripture institution and do so little honour it by their patience or comfort under Troubles Wherefore were the great Mysteries of Godliness made known to us and the promises of the world to come and all the directions concerning the subjection of the Soul to God and those blessed priviledges we enjoy by Christ if they all be not able to satisfie and stay your heart and compose it to a quiet submission to God when it is his pleasure to take away his comforts from you Is there no Balm in Gilead Is there no Physician there Will not the whole Word of God yield you a Cordial or a Cure It is a disparagement to the provision Christ hath made for our comfort 1. Surely this comes either from ignorance or forgetfulness you do not meditate in the Word or study the grounds of comfort and remember them Heb. 12. 5. Have you forgotten the exhortation which speaks unto you as unto children Hagar had a Well of comfort nigh at hand yet ready to dye for thirst 2. You indulge a distemper and the obstinacy and peevishness of grief Ier. 31. 15. A voice was heard in Rama lamentation and bitter weeping Rachel weeping for her children and refused to be comforted Certainly you do not expostulate with your selves and cite your Passions before the Tribunal of Reason Psal. 42. 5. or else look altogether to the grievance not to the comfort aggravate the grievances extenuate the comforts you pitch too much upon temporal happiness would have God maintain you at your own rate Heb.
converting power of the Word they are a secondary confirmation of the truth of the Word to us I tell you why I put in that Word a secondary confirmation they are not a primary for we must believe the Word before we can feel its efficacy and find it to be effectual to us and therefore the primary grounds of Faith are the impressions of God upon the Word the secondary are the impressions of God upon the heart now I have felt the vertue and power of the truth upon my soul and all the world shall not draw me from it I must have a primary confirmation of the truth of the Word before I can believe and before it can work in me The ●…stle saith 1 Thess. 2. 13. Ye received the Word not as the word of man but as the Word of God which effectually worketh in you that believe First I receive it as the Word of God by some Marks and Notes and Characters some impress of God upon his Word somewhat God hath left of himself in the Word and that awes my heart to reverence it there I receive it upon my heart but when it works in me mightily I have a secondary confirmation When I have eyes to see the impress of God upon the Word then I feel the power of it and when I have felt the power of it it 's confirmed in my soul 1 Cor. 1. 6. When we feel the blessed effects the quicknings and comforts of the Word it 's a mighty help to Faith So 1 Iohn 5. 10. He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself What is that witness in himself why the witness of the Spirit applying the blood of Christ to the Conscience sanctifying and quickning the heart then he hath the witness in himself and is more confirmed that Jesus is the Christ and the Word of God is true and cannot easily be divorced from it he hath felt the effects of it in his own heart Col. 1. 5 6. For the hope that is laid up for you in heaven whereof ye heard before in the word of the truth of the Gospel and knew the grace of God in truth We guess at things before and have but a wavering Faith such as may let in some work upon the Soul then we know it in truth then it is more fully made good to us by the convincing comforting and sanctifying Spirit that evidenceth it to our Souls and this can be no other but the truth of God this makes our Faith more strong and rooted and we may be confirmed in the hope and belief of the Gospel and may not easily be removed therefrom 2. Take Faith in the other Notion for a dependance upon God for something that we stand in need of every manifestation of his grace it should be kept as an experience by us for afterwards when that frame may be away when God may hide his face and all dead in the soul. As David in his infirmity remembred the years of the right hand of the most High and former experiences of God Psal. 77. 10. As he in an outward case for outward deliverances remembred the former help and succors he had from God so we may remember former grace and former quickning There are many ups and downs in the spiritual life for even the new Creature is changeable both in point of duty and in point of comfort Now it 's a mighty confirmation when we remember what God hath done First In point of duty Sometimes you shall find you are dull and heartless under the Ordinances of God in reading and hearing you find little life lazy and almost indifferent whether you call upon God in secret or hear the Word or join in the communion of Saints no relish in any duty do it almost for custom-sake or at best but to please your Consciences you must do it and you drive on heavily not for any great need you feel of them or good you find by them or hope you expect from them Now it is of great use to remember how I have waited upon God formerly and he hath quickned refreshed and comforted me and therefore it is good to try again to keep up our dependance upon his Ordinances when this dulness seizeth upon the soul and this listlesness when Conscience is sleepy and the heart hangs off from God remember I have been quickned 2. If it be in point of comfort fears and sorrows why is there no Balm in Gilead no Physician there Hath not God relieved in like straits before and given in fresh consolations when you have bemoaned your selves and opened your case before him There are none acquainted with the spiritual life but have many experiences both of deadness and comfort Now one is a great help against the other that our hands may not wax faint and feeble God that hath comforted may comfort again and why should I neglect his appointed means No I will continue there and lie at the Pool where the waters have been stirred 2. They are of Use again to stir up our affections to God and his Word 1. To increase our love to God O! we should keep the impression of his kind manifestation still upon the heart that the mercy may be continually acknowledged surely 't is a favor that God will manifest himself to us and own us in our attendance upon his Word and other duties The Lord Jesus promiseth it as a great blessing Iohn 14. 21. He that loveth me and keepeth my commandment shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my self to him Now then when any such sensible favor is vouchsafed to us we should not forget it but lay it up as a continual ground of thankfulness and love to God Cant. 1. 4. We will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy love more than Wine When God hath treated us most magnificently in his Ordinances either at his Table or Word and God hath refreshed and revived our Souls O! we will remember this and lay it up for the honor of God and knit our hearts in a greater love to God 2. It is of great Use to increase our love to the Word for the excellency and worth of the Word is found experimentally by Believers so that their love and estimation of it is more fixed and setled upon their hearts so that they purpose to make use of it always for their Comfort and direction it is a great encouragement when formerly they have found comfort and life thereby The Apostle to settle the Galatians that began to waver that were apt to be overcome by their Judaizing Brethren to settle them in love to the Gospel he puts them to the question Gal. 3. 2. This only would I learn of you Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith The Spirit of Regeneration with all his comforts and graces are not conveyed to you by the doctrine of the
Law but the doctrine of the Gospel As if he had said Stick to that Doctrine where you have been quickned comforted revived and your hearts setled for God hath owned that doctrine He appeals to their own conscience and to their own known experience that they should not quit the doctrine of Faith but prize and keep close to it for surely that which hath been a means of begetting grace in our souls that should be highly prized by us If God hath wrought grace and any comfort and peace stick there and own God there and be not easily moved from thence Another Apostle reasons Iam. 1. 18 19. God hath begotten us by the word of truth wherefore be swift to hear that is O! do not neglect hearing take heed of forsaking or neglecting the Word for then you go against your own known experience you know here you had your life quickning comfort strength and will you be turned off from this for many times a Seducer may turn off a Believer from the Word which hath given him his first knowledge of Christ. There are three Causes which carry Saints to the Word and other Ordinances viz. Necessity Natural Appetite and inward Inclination and Experience Necessity they cannot live without the Word Natural Appetite and inward Inclination they have hearts suited to this work the Spirit which wrought in the heart hath put a nature in them sutable to the work And Experience they have found benefit by it These are the three grand Causes of respect to the Word and they are all implied or exprest in that 1 Pet. 2. 2. As new born Babes desire the sincere milk of the Word there 's natural appetite for the Word we have them come as new born Babes and there 's necessity you cannot live nor keep nor increase what you have unless you keep to the Word and there 's Experience if so be you have tasted you have had powerful impressions and quicknings by this Word We should engage our hearts upon experience the comfort life and light that we have had by the Word of God 3d Reason Our own spiritual Estate will sooner be discerned by these Experiences the comfort and quickning received from the Word in the way of duty for experience worketh hope Rom. 5. 4. If your experiences be observed and regarded this works a hopeful dependance upon God for everlasting glory your evidences will be more ready and sooner come to hand The motions of our souls are various and through corruption very confused and dark and this is that which makes it so difficult upon actual search to d●…cern how it stands between us and God it 's for want of observation But now if there be constant observation of what passeth between us and God how he hath quickned comforted and owned us in our attendance upon him and what he hath done to bring on our souls in the way of life these will make up an evidence and will abundantly conduce to the quickning and comforting of our hearts Use I. For Information It shews us 1. The Reason why so many neglect and contemn God's Word because they never g●… benefit by it they find no life in it therefore no delight in it Those that are quickned 〈◊〉 knowledge the mercy and improve it they esteem the Word and have a greater c●…science of their duty It is not enough to find truth in truth not to be able to contrad●… it but you must find life then we will prize and esteem it when it hath been lively in its operations to our souls 2. It shews the Reason why so many forget the Word because they are not quickned You would remember it by a good token if there were a powerful impression left upon your souls and the reason is because you do not meditate upon it that you may receive this lively influence of the Spirit For a Sermon would not be forgotten if it had left any lively impression upon your souls 3. If we want quickning we must go to God for it and God works powerfully by the influence of his grace and so he quickens us by his Spirit and he works morally by the Word both by the Promises and Threatnings thereof and so if you would be quickned you must use the means attend upon Reading and Preaching and meditating upon the Word As he works powerfully with respect to himself so morally by reasonings Use II. By way of Reflection upon our selves Have we had any of these Experiences David found life in God's Word therefore resolves never to forego it or forget it Therefore what experience have you had of the Word of God surely at least at first conversion there was the work of Faith and Repentance at first you will have this experience How were you brought home to God what have you had no quickning from the Word of God Case But here 's a Case of Conscience Doth every one know their Conversion or way of their own Conversion Christians are usually sensible of this first work There is so much bitter sorrow and afterwards so much rejoycing of hope which doth accompany that surely this should not be strange But though you have not been so wary to mark God's dealings with you and the particular quicknings of your souls yet at least when the Lord raised you out of your security and brought you home to himself you should have remembred it 1 Thess. 1. 9. They themselves shew of us what manner of entring we had unto you The entrance usually is known though afterward the work be carried on with less observation Growth is not so sensible as the first change God's first work is most powerful meets with greater opposition and so leaves a greater feeling upon us and therefore it were strange if we were brought home to Christ and no way privy and conscious to the way of it as if all were done in our sleep I say to think so were to give security a soft Pillow to rest on And therefore what quicknings had you then Can you say Well I shall never forget this happy season and occasion when God first awakened me to look after himself Many of God's Children cannot trace the particular Footsteps of their Conversion and mark out all the Stages of Christ's Journey and approach to their Souls 〈◊〉 are not alike thus troubled But yet that men may not please themselves with the 〈◊〉 position of imaginary grace wrought in them without their privity and knowledge let ●…e speak to this grand Case this manner of entrance of Christ into our souls how we are quickned from the dead and made living 1. None are converted but are first convinced of their danger and evil estate God's first work is upon their understandings Ier. 31. 19. After I was instructed I smote upon the thigh c. There is some light breaks in upon the Soul which sets them seriously a considering What am I Whither am I going What will become of me And Rom. 7. 9. When the
a circumstance the Word written not a dead letter but can sufficiently evidence it self to be of God de jure it hath the same power still though de facto not always so received and so owned by the sons of Men but only by those that are enlightned by the Spirit to see this evidence You find by daily experience every ingenious Author leaves an image and impress of his own spirit the mark of his genius upon every work that he doth We can say of an Exquisite Painting by some secret Art in it this is the hand of such a great Master Now can it be imagined that God should put his hand to any work and leave no signature or impress of it upon that work it cannot be imagined for it must be either because he could not or because he would not that God could not cannot be said without blasphemy Can Men shew the wisdom and learning they have attain'd to in every work and cannot God who is the Father of lights and the Fountain of wisdom insinuate such secret marks and notes of his wisdom and divine authority into that writing he took care should be pen'd for the use and comfort of the world that it might be known to be his And that he would not that cannot be believed neither He that is so willing to shew man what is good so willing to reveal himself to the reasonable creature can we imagine he would so wholly conceal himself that there should be no stamp of himself upon that doctrine to move our reverence and obedience but receive it from the testimony of such a Church Therefore surely there is enough in the Word to discover God to be the Author The Apostles when they went abroad to work Faith all the fruit that they expected from their Preaching was from this self-evidencing light which was discovered in their doctrine therefore doth the Apostle say 2 Cor. 4. 2. Not handling the Word of God deceitfully but by manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God They did not commend themselves to the consciences of Men meerly by the Miracles which they wrought though that also was some Seal of their Commission and that they were authoriz'd and sent by God to preach those things to the world but by the manifestation of the truth commending themselves to every mans conscience So the Apostle reckons up many things approving our selves as the Ministers of God by the word of truth 2 Cor. 6. 4. Therefore certainly there is somewhat in the truth deliver'd that will sufficiently make out it self to be of God and when they render the reason why this Word was not received it was not for want of evidence as if this truth could not sufficiently be known to be of God but because Men were blinded with their lusts and carnal affections for so he saith 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not c. Which shews there is a light in the Gospel by which it can discover itself and if this light be hidden from the eyes of Men it is because their minds are blinded by their own lusts and carnal affections Now if the certainty of truth will draw affection certainly those truths which are conveyed in the Word of God should gain upon our hearts and draw affection why because these are sublime supreme and weighty truths and come in with a great deal of evidence upon the hearts of Men. 2. If Goodness can gain the hearts and affections of Men the Word of God is good as well as true There 's a double desire in Man a desire of truth and a desire of immortality to know the truth and to enjoy the chiefest good the happiness of the intellect of the understanding that lies in the contemplation of truth and the happiness of the will in the enjoyment of good In the state of Innocency this was represented by the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to suit these two capacities and desires that were in the heart of Man The Tree of Life to suit his desires of happiness and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil to suit his desires of truth Under the Law this is set forth by the Candlestick and the Table of Shew-bread and in the Gospel by the Sacrament of Baptism which is called an enlightning Hebr. 10. 32. After you were enlightned that is after you were baptized and the Lord's Supper Light and Life they are the two great things Man looks after as a reasonable Creature to get more Light and then Life that he may enjoy God Now we are still at a loss for satisfaction of these desires until we meet with the Word of God where there is primum verum the supreme truth and summum bonum the chiefest good and therefore the directions of the Word are called true Laws and good Statutes Nehem. 9. 13. True Laws all words of truth so to perfect the understandings of Men and good Laws very suitable to their will and inclination and so bear a full proportion with the desires of a reasonable Creature So 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation The Gospel is a faithful saying there 's truth to perfect the understanding and then worthy of the chiefest embraces of our wills and affections As there is plain certain clear truth in the Word of God a satisfaction to the understanding in the view of truth so there is also a full compliance with the motions of the will which the Scripture offereth Now two things there are the Scriptures do reveal which are good for Men and cannot be found elsewhere and all the world have been puzled about them how to find them out 1 Reconciliation with God 2. Salvation or Eternal Happiness 1. Reconciliation with God This is the grand enquiry of the guilty creature wherewith God shall be appeased satisfied and we reconciled to him he being offended by our sin Micah 6. 8. How Justice shall be satisfied and Men that are obnoxious to the wrath of God may come to have delightful communion with him this is the great scruple that troubleth the Creature and all the false Religions in the World were invented for the removing and assailing this doubt and scruple and appeasing the hearts of Men as to these fears of divine justice Now we can nowhere be satisfied but in the way of Reconciliation and Peace which is tendred by God himself to repenting sinners through the mediation of Christ Jesus Natural conscience will make us sensible of sin and wrath and we have no ransom to pay it and all other creatures cannot help us for they are debtors to God for all they have and can do how then shall God be satisfied how shall we escape this vengeance This fear would have remained
shew it by a constant and exact adherence to the directions thereof whatever temptations he meet with to the contrary David produceth this as one evidence of that affection in the first verse of this section or part O how I love thy Law I shall shew you 1. What Temptations there are to the contrary 2. What Reason there is to be exact and constant 1. What temptations to the contrary 1 From the Natural instability of our own hearts nothing is so changeable as man We have certain hearts for the present but we soon cool again and when temptations arise are carried off from God and that exactness and care that we were wont to shew in our Obedience to him what was said of Reuben is true of every man in some degree Gen. 49. 4. unstable as water 'T is carried hither and thither in various and uncertain motions So are we up and down off and on ebbing and flowing not stedfast in any good frame sometimes seen to have strong motions towards God and holiness but anon grow cold and careless or as a bird is now upon the top of a tree by and by upon the under branches and then upon the ground Such a different posture of spirit may every one observe in himself and sometimes in the same duty God is always the same and so are his ways they have the same lovelyness which they had before but we are not always the same The Rock standeth where it did but the waters slow too and again The least blast of a temptation maketh us break off our course Now this natural levity of spirit is a great hinderance to us We do not always see with the same eyes nor have we with the same degree of affection You did run well who hindred you Gal. 5. 7. There may be a ready forwardness and yet a great defection afterwards This uncertainty is not only at first before we are settled by grace or have any sound acquaintance with God's ways Then 't is most Iames 1. 8. But after conversion it remaineth with us in part Those measures of affection and zeal which we once obtained are not constant with us but suffer some notable decay and our edge is often taken off and blunted Especially our first love is not of long standing and our after carriage not answerable to our promising beginnings Now there is no satisfying reason for this change why we should make an halt and grow remiss and lag in the profession of Godliness and leave off our first works nothing but our changeableness of spirit 2 From the furious oppositions and malice of Satan and his instruments 1. Satan pursueth after men that would cleave to God's ways as Pharaoh did after the Israelites either to bring them back again or to weary them and vex them and make their present course uncomfortable to them Now the violent assault of multiplied temptations is apt to make us stagger and depart from that good course that we have propounded to our selves as the Israelites were running back to Aegypt because of the inconveniences of the wilderness But it should not be so a Christian should stand his ground Whom resist stedfast in the faith knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your Brethren that are in the world 1 Pet. 5. 9. They that make Conscience of their duty and are most set to serve and honour God must reckon upon the hottest battel and forest conflict from Satan to hinder or discourage them therein He watcheth all advantages and is still in action against them Now this should not shake us or loosen our adherence to the truths of the Gospel for so it is with every one that goeth to Heaven he must be watching praying striving yielding is not the way to be quiet but resisting if you yield to him in the least he will carry you farther and farther till he hath left thee under a stupified or terrified Conscience Stupified till thou hast lost all thy tenderness A stone at the top of a hill when it beginneth to rowl down ceaseth not till it come to the bottom Thou thinkest it is but yielding a little and so by degrees art carried on till thou hast sinned away all thy Profession and all Principles of Conscience by the secret witchery of his temptations And of the other side terrified till thy peace comfort and sweet sense of God's love be gone and thou brought under the black horrors of a dreadful despair Therefore a stout and peremptory resistance is the only means of safety Consider your case is not singular your lot is no harder than the rest of God's Children therefore do not depart from God 2 Satan's instruments may rage against us and yet we must not depart Psal. 44. 17 18. All this is come upon us yet have we not forgotten thee neither have we dealt falsly in thy Covenant our heart is not turned back neither have our steps declined from thy way All this what Scorn Disgrace Bloody Cruel Reproved Maligned Butchered yet stedfast with God in the profession of the faith hazards and troubles are no excuse this is but a time to shew our love to God our duty to God is the same still 3 From the example of others especially who are of esteem for Godliness example hath a mighty force upon men Man is a ductile Creature like sheep they run for company Not what we ought to do but what others do There are three Reasons of Natural Corruption the Flesh the Devil but first example of others Eph. 2. 2. In time past ye walked according to the course of this world The universal corrupt Course and custom of these among whom we live is a great snare To follow a multitude to do evil is a strong excitement but no sufficient excuse especially of good men They that are gracious may stagger strangely in reeling times and be overtaken with dangerous mistakes Now their sins authorize others and draw them into the snare Gal. 2. 12. Carried away with their dissimulation A strong stream or current impetuously doth carry all things away with it They take all for current that they do without examining their actions and so run away from the rule by their errors 4 From the Providence of God which may seem to be against those that are exact right or the sure way pointed out to us in his Word Two ways 1. In the manifold disapointments as to his favouring a good cause Their endeavours blasted many troubles befal them God's people are often put to tryals by God himself to try the sincerity of their love Blind Bartimeus rebuked by the Disciples Mark 10. 48. Many charged him that he should hold his peace but he cryed the more a great deal Thou Son of David have mercy upon me And so Christ to the woman of Canaan Matth. 15. 22. to the 27th ver puts her off and are not we put to such tryals in these latter times when we own him God seemeth to put us
Therefore besides the advertency of the understanding there is the consent or approbation of the will Paul speaketh good words of the Law Rom. 7. 12. The Law is holy and the Commandment is holy just and good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Law in general and that Commandment which wrought such tragical effects in his heart that rifled all his confidence and hopes and left him wounded with the sense of sin 't is holy in teaching duty to God just in prescribing duties to our Neighbour good in respect to our selves a Law becoming God to give and us to receive suitable and profitable Thus should we approve and like the Law of God Secondly Choice whatever temptation we have to the contrary A preferring or prevailing love an heart-engaging approbation that doth prevailingly determine the soul to the ways of God Non differunt re consensus electio saith Aquinas sed ratione tantum ut consensus dicatur secundum quod placet ad agendum electio autem secundum quod praefertur his quae non placent Consent to the Law and choice of the Law are all one and the same act distinguished by divers respects and considerations 'T is called consent to the Law as it approveth of what the Law adviseth and 't is called choice or esteem as it preferreth the Law and our obedience to it above other things 'T is actualis praelatio unius rei prae altera a preferring one thing above another Thirdly I come to the properties or qualifications of this esteem First 'T is not a simple but comparative approbation There is a twofold act of Judgment the first act and the second The first act is that whereby I distinguish good from evil and pronounce the one to be embraced the other eschewed approve the one disapprove the other But there is a comparative approbation that is that which the understanding judgeth best all circumstances considered better than all other things that can be represented This is the proper Notion of esteem Heb. 11. 26. Esteeming the reproach of Christ c. We approve of many things simply and in the first act which we disallow in the second when we consider them as invested with some difficulty and unpleasantness or overpoised with contrary desires when we compare them with the pleasure and profit which we must forsake it consents to walk in the ways of God as Orpah will follow Naomi into the Land of Israel if she may do it without inconveniency Ruth 1. 14. The young man esteemed salvation worthy to be enquired after Mark 10. 20. but is loth to forgoe his earthly possessions to purchase that inheritance When the Judgment that we make of the thing simply considered in it self and of the thing as considered with all circumstances as it cometh in comparison with other things that must be endured or forgone Secondly There is a Judgment of general estimation and a Judgment of particular application By the one I bind Duty upon others by the other I engage my own heart as the expression is Ier. 30. 21. Who is he that engageth his heart to approach unto me saith the Lord. To engage his heart to take God for his portion An instance we have in David Psal. 73. 28. But it is good for me to draw near to God I may approve many things as good for which I have no appetite my self Many will yield that 't is good to serve God that cannot work or do not engage their heart to it Many approve piety in the general 't is good to be religious to live a holy life but when it cometh to our own case when we are to abstain from this or that sin we draw back Many know what things are more excellent but do not practise or embrace them commend those that are religious but do not imitate them Acts 5. 13. the people highly esteemed the Christians but yet would not become Christians themselves Psal. 48. 14. This God is our God for ever and ever Many a wicked man judgeth it best for him to continue his evil courses and thinketh Religion is good for other men but 't is not good for him but Gods Children are of another mind Thirdly 'T is not a sleight and superficial esteem but such as is deep and solid Mat. 13. 20. He heareth the word and anon with joy receiveth it 'T is a blessed thing to hear of the pardon of sin Heb. 6. 5. to taste of the good word of God and of the powers of the world to come as they that cheapen wines taste though they do not go through with the bargain Some inclination of heart half a mind to be throughly godly and religious Iohn 5. 35. They rejoiced in his light for a season They were much taken with Iohn for a while and the novelty and excellency of his Doctrine But when is this esteem deep and solid It may be known 1. By the root of it 2. The ground and formal object of it 3. The manner or way how we come by it 1. The root of it When the root of this esteem is a vital principle of Grace Mat. 13. 21. He hath not root in himself The Word is not ingraffed Iames 1. 21. The people had a good inclination All that the Lord hath spoken we will do Deut. 5. 29. But Oh that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandments always c. They had a mind to do well but where faith fear and love are not planted there may be some stirrings of Conscience but not a full purpose of heart There is the approbation of an awakened and enlightened Conscience and the approbation of a renewed heart A convinced man approveth and a converted man approveth but in a different manner The one is but a flash like fire in Straw the other hath a durable affection 2. When the ground and formal object of it is not a temporal natural or carnal motive but the moral goodness of the Law because 't is the pure and holy word and will of God who is the Lawgiver whose authority is absolute There may be carnal motives to encline us to esteem the Word as the novelty of Iohn's Doctrine Iohn 5. 35. They rejoiced in his light for a season delight to hear a plausible and rational discourse as Ezekiel's Hearers Ezek. 33. 32. And lo thou art to them as a very lovely Song of one that hath a pleasant voice that can play well upon an instrument for they hear thy words but do them not Or carnal motives as they Gen. 34. 22 23. Herein will the men consent to dwell with us to be one people if every male among us be circumcised as they are circumcised Shall not their Cattel and their substance be ours Only let us consent unto them c. And so temporal interests Religion hath a portion for which 't is courted The consent of many to the Law is the
found out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a first mover and a first cause but when and how the world was made they were left in uncertainties which was first the Egg or the Hen the Oak or the Acorn Heb. 11. 3. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God so that things which are seen were not made of things that do appear A child is taught more than they could find out by their profound researches So concerning the Fall of Man Conscience will inform us of a distinction between good and evil and Heathens by the light of Nature could speak of Vertue and Vice as moral perfection and a deordination but nothing of sin and righteousness relating to a Covenant and whence this mischief began they knew not They complained of Nature as of a Step-mother observed an inclination to evil more than to good that vices are learned without a Teacher that man is born into the world crying beginneth his life with a punishment but the first spring and rise of evil was a secret to them but clearly discovered to us Rom. 5. 12. Wherefore as by one man sin entered into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Mans restitution and redemption by Christ is wonderful indeed 1 Tim. 3. 16. And without controversie great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory This could not be found by man how could they know the free purposes of Gods Grace unless God revealed them This is the Mystery of Mysteries which Angels desire to pry into 1 Pet. 1. 12. So excellent and ravishing a Mystery is this plot of salvation of lost sinners by Christ incarnate that the very Angels cannot enough exercise themselves in the contemplation of it So union with Christ and communion with him a Mystery that Nature could never have thought of Gods keeping a familiar correspondence with his Creatures Gods dwelling in us our dwelling in God 1 Iohn 4. 13. Hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his spirit Words we should not dare to have used if God had not used them before us it would have lookd like blasphemy to speak so if we had not the warrant of Scripture So the resurrection of the body and life eternal they are all wonders 2 Tim. 1. 10. But is now made manifest by the appearance of our Saviour Iesus Christ who hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel Heathens might dream of a life after death but could never understand it distinctly It is brought to light Their wise men saw it like the blind man who saw Men walking like Trees or a Spire at a distance no clearness no certainty Lord thy testimonies are wonderful Thirdly It is wonderful for purity and perfection The Decalogue in ten words compriseth the whole Duty of man and reacheth to the very soul and all the motions of the heart All the precepts of morality are advanced to the highest perfection Those fragments and sorry remainders of the light of Nature that have escaped out of the ruines of the Fall will shew us the necessity of a good life But the word of God calleth for a good heart a regeneration as well as a reformation not only abstaining from acts of sin but lusts 1 Pet. 2. 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as Strangers and Pilgrims that ye abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. Not only the outward work but the spirit that is weighed in the ballance of the Sanctuary Prov. 16. 2. All the ways of a man are clean in his own eyes but the Lord weigheth the spirits It mightily establisheth faith fear and love to God as the essential Graces When we consider Duty in the lump we have no admiting thoughts but when we look abroad into all the parts and branches of obedience whereunto the Law diffuseth it self then the holiliness which the Law requireth is admirable then we see it no easie matter to serve this holy and jealous God it is no easie matter to go to the bottom of this perfection Fourthly It is wonderful for the harmony and consent of all the parts All Religion is of a piece and one part doth not interfere with another but conspireth to promote the great end of subjection of the Creature to God The Law hath a mighty subserviency to the Gospel and the first Covenant shutteth up the sinner immediately under the curse that mercy may open the door to him The Gospel is first darkly revealed and still it groweth as the light doth till noon-day At first an obscure intimation The seed of the woman to Abraham In thy seed which after was repeated to Isaac to cut off Ishmael then to Iacob to cut off Esau yet not what Tribe Gen. 49. 10. The Scepter shall not depart from Iudah nor the Lawgiver from between his feet till Shilo come yet not what Family of Iudah to David 2 Sam. 7. 13. I will establish the Throne of his Kingdom for ever then Isai. 7. 14. Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and call his name Immanuel then Iohn the Baptist Iohn 1. 29. Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world points with a finger to Christ. This while in short the Scriptures do so set forth the mercy of God as that the duty of the Creature is not abolished so offers Grace as not to exclude our care and use of means Justification and Sanctification promote one another all is ordered with good advice 2 Sam. 23. 5. Although my house be not so with God he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure Thus the wonderful harmony order and consent of all the parts with respect to the great end which was the glorifying of God and the subjection of the Creature demonstrate the wonderfulness of Gods testimonies The glorifying of Gods Grace and Mercy in those that are saved and his Justice in those that are damned With respect to this God made man upright furnished with abilities to do his will but mutable and in case of a Fall to begin with a new Covenant He will have his mercy honoured without prejudice to his justice the comfort of the Creature established so as Duty not abolished not all of commands nor all of promises but these interwoven that they may serve one another A Promise at the back of a Command to make it effectual Command besides a Promise to cause humbling neither looseness nor rigour If the Covenant had been left to our ordering it had been a confused business Now it is wonderfully suited God keepeth up his Dominion and Sovereignty notwithstanding his Grace and condescension Justice hath full satisfaction yet Grace glorified Fifthly Wonderful for the
Wicked alive in some sense II. When is the Word deeply imprinted upon our Minds That is discovered by two things sound Belief and serious Consideration when 't is strongly Believed and often duly Considered 1. When 't is strongly Believed or else it worketh not for all things work according to the Faith we exercise about them 1 Thes. 2. 13. The Word of God which worketh effectually also in you that Believe Did we believe that our Eternal Condition did depend upon the observance or non-observance of this Rule we would regard it more Psal. 119. 66. Teach me good Iudgment and Knowledge for I have believed thy Commandments Lord I believe I must stand or fall by this Rule and therefore let me know all my Duty so Heb. 11. 13. Being perswaded of these things they imbraced them We have not a thorough perswasion about these things our perswasions about Eternal things are very weak when Gods expressions about it are very clear and strong Most men guess at a World to come but are not thoroughly perswaded They have a loose or general opinion that the Scripture is the Word of God the Rule by which they shall be tryed but do not soundly assent to it and receive it as the Word by which they shall be Judged at the last day Iohn 12. 48. Christ pronounceth as the Word pronunceth There is a Non-contradiction but not an active and lively Faith this and nothing but this bindeth the Will and Conscience to obedience 2. Often Considered David still insists upon this the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies 'T is as if he had said I have said it already and I will repeat it again and again 'T is constant thoughts are Operative and musing maketh the fire burn Green wood is kindled not by a flash or spark but by constant blowing Deep Frequent and Ponderous thoughts leave some impression upon the Heart the greatest matters in the World will not work much upon him that will not think upon them All the Efficacy is lost for want of these ponderous thoughts Why are all the offers and invitations of Gods Grace of so little effect Math. 22. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they made light of it they would not take it into their care and thoughts Why do all the injunctions and precepts of God work no more Men will not consider in their hearts Deut. 4. 39 40. all the Comminations of God Psal. 10. 22. and therefore he calls upon them Now consider this ye that forget God lest I tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver It 's for want of this that all the promises of God of Heaven and Happiness work so little upon us 2 Tim. 2. 7. Consider what I say and the Lord give you understanding in all things The truth lieth by neglected unimproved till consideration take it up and lay it in the view of Conscience and then it worketh Till we take it into our thoughts we have no use of any truth therefore set your hearts seriously to consider of these things III. Why the Everlasting Righteousness of Gods Testimonies should be deeply imprinted in our Minds 1. It Establisheth our Judgments against vain Fancies and the humour of other Gospeling The Apostle saith Gal. 1. 8. Though we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel to you then that we have preached unto you let him be accursed 1 Tim. 6. 3. If any man teach otherwise c. There are some that expect speculum spiritus sancti a greater measure of light beyond what the Spirit now affordeth new Nuntioes from Heaven to assoil the doubts of the perplexed World No the present Rule leadeth a Believer all along in his way to Heaven other and better Institution shall not be cannot be Christ promised to bless this Doctrine to the Worlds end Matth. 28. 20. I will be with you to the end of the World to guide and succour them Christ prayed for no others but those that believe through their Word Ioh. 17. 20. this Word which the Apostles have consigned to the use of the Church An Angel is accursed if he should bring any other Doctrine Gal. 1. 8. There is no other way of Salvation given or to be given Act. 4. 12. if an Angel should hold out another way believe it not The Apostle propounds an Impossible case to shew the certainty of this way 't is good to be sure of our rule now this Consideration helpeth that 2. Because it bindeth and helpeth to Obedience partly as it sheweth the absolute necessity of Obedience because the terms of Salvation are indispensibly fixed and will Everlastingly stand in force therefore I must yield to God or perish The soul cometh off most kindly to the wayes of God when 't is shut up unavoidably without all hope of escape and evasion but by yielding to Gods Terms The Lord will have the World know that there is no hope of a dispensation Mark 16. 16. He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be danined The Terms are peremtorily fixed there is no relaxation in the Gospel-Covenant Now this doth bind the heart exceedingly to consider verse 152. of this Psalm Concerning thy Testimonies I have known them of old thou hast founded them for ever And partly as it urgeth to speediness of Obedience You will not get better Terms for the Righteousness of Gods Terms is Everlasting as good yield at first as at last The Laws of Christianity are always the same and your heart is not likely to be better by delay Your standing out were more Justisiable in the account of Reason if you could get better Terms Partly as it ingageth to seriousness whilst it carrieth the mind off from the vanities of the World into the midst of the World to come I am not to mind what will content me for the present but what will profit me for ever Holiness will abide when other things fade My ways are to be scanned by an eternal Rule some distinctions will not outlive time as Rich and Poor High and Low but the distinction of Holy or Un-holy Sanctified or Un-sanctified these abide 1 Pet. 1. 24. All flesh is grass and the glory of Man as the flower of grass the grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away but the word of the Lord indureth for ever Nothing stirreth us up more to provide for a better Life than to consider the uncertainty of the Worlds Glory and the Everlastingness of Gods Approbation according to the rule of his Word When all things are dissolved we are to be tryed by a Rule that will never fail Our Pomp and Honour and Credit and all things that we hunt after in the World are soon blasted but the Gospel tells us of things that are everlasting Everlasting Torments and Everlasting Bliss and therefore our thoughts should be more about them Isa. 55. 2. Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which
escape was some while after 2 By giving in spiritual Manifestations to the Soul though he doth not give the particular Mercy prayed for As when upon the prayer he reviveth the soul of him that prayeth Iob 33. 26. He shall pray unto God and he will be favourable to him and he shall see his face with joy The Lord giveth them the light of his Countenance and special discoveries of his love or support till the Mercy come Psal. 138. 3. In the day when I cryed thou answeredst me and strengthenedst me with strength in my Soul Support is an Answer such an Answer had Paul My Grace is sufficient for thee Or when the heart is quieted though we do not know what God will do with our requests yet satisfied in the discharge of our Duty and that we have commended the matter to God So it is said of Hannah When she had prayed her Countenance was no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. And Phil. 4. 6 7. Be careful for nothing but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God and the peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Iesus Christ. Sometimes by a secret Impression of Confidence or a strong inclination to hope well of the thing prayed for Psal. 6. 8. The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping Or Experiences as they that travailed to Ierusalem passing through the Valley Baca they met with a Well by the way Psal. 84. 6. a sweet refreshing thought or some help in the Spiritual Life by serious dealing with God some Consideration to set you a work or some new ingagement of the soul to God as a recompence of the Duty some Principles of Faith drawn forth in the view of Conscience not shewed before Some truth or other presented with fresh Life and vigour upon the heart 3. Sometimes by way of Commutation and Exchange and so God doth answer the prayer though he doth not give the mercy prayed for When he giveth another thing that is as good or better for the party that prayeth though not in kind the same yet in worth and value as good This Commutation may be three wayes First In regard of the Person praying David fasts and humbleth and melteth his soul for his Persecutors Psal. 35. 13. and it returned into his own bosom was converted to his own benefit his fasting had no effect upon them but his Charity did not lose its reward David prayeth for his first Child by Bathsheba but that Child dieth and God giveth Solomon instead thereof 2 Sam. 12. 15. Noah Daniel Iob shall save their own Souls Ezek. 14. 14. Your peace shall return to you again Luk. 10. 5 6. the Comfort of discharging their Duty Secondly In regard of the matter Carnal things are begged and Spiritual things are given Acts 1. 6 7. The Apostles asked him wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel They did not receive the Kingdom to Israel but received the promise of the Spirit Moses would fain enter into Canaan with the People Deut. 3. 23 24. And God said let it suffice thee speak no more of this matter but God gave him a Pisgah sight and ease of the trouble of Wars We would have speedy riddance of Trouble but God thinketh not fit as showers that come by drops soak into the Earth better then those that come in a Tempest and Hurricane We ask for Ease in Troubles and God will give Courage under Troubles Lam. 3. 55 56 57. I called upon thy name O Lord out of the low dungeon Thou hast heard my voice hide not thine ear at my breathing at my cry Thou drewest near in the day that I called upon thee thou saidst Fear not His gracious and powerful Presence in Trouble was enough Christ was heard in that he feared Heb. 5. 7. not saved from that Hour but supported and strengthened in it Iob sacrificed prayed for his Children when they were Feasting Iob 1. 5. and though they were all destroyed God gave him Patience verse 22. for in all that befell him he sinned not nor charged God foolishly Thirdly In regard of means we pray such means may not miscarry God will use other As Abraham would fain have Ishmael the Child of the Promise but God intended Isaac Gen. 17. 18. O that Ishmael might live before thee Thus doth God often blast instruments we most expect good from and maketh use of others to be Instruments for our good which we did least expect it from God may give us our Will in Anger when the Mercy turneth to our hurt Therefore the kind of Gods Answer must be referred to his own Will in all things for which we are not to pray Absolutely and when we have discharged our Duty endeavoured to approve our Hearts to God take what Answer he will give Doct. 2. From the manner of praying with the whole Heart the Saints have the more confidence of being heard in Prayer David alledgeth his crying with the whole heart as an hopeful intimation of a gracious Answer 1. Because a Prayer rightly made hath the assurance of a Promise the Promise is Ioh. 16. 24. Ask and you shall receive that your joy may be full Now this beareth no exception but that we ask according to his Will 1 Ioh. 5. 14. Si bona petant boni bene ad bonum Good men asking good things in the name of Christ for a good end thou canst not miss 2. Where there is sincerity and fervency we have two witnesses to establish our Comfort and Hope the Spirit of God that knoweth the deep things of God and the Spirit of Man that knoweth the things that are in man Gods Spirit who stirreth up these groans in us Rom. 8. 26 27. He that searcheth the heart knoweth the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God And the Testimony of our own Spirits that we have done our part and discharged our Duty and so have true Joy and Confidence Iob 16. 19 20. My witness is in heaven and my record is on high My friends scorn me but mine eye poureth out teares to God 3. God doth not use to send them away comfortless that call upon him in spirit and truth because by one grace he maketh way for another by the grace of Assistance for the grace of Acceptance Psal. 10. 17. Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble thou hast prepared their heart thou wilt cause thine ear to hear Where God hath given an Heart to speak he will afford an ear to hear for God will not lose his own work he cannot refuse those requests which are according to the direction of his Word and the motions of his holy Spirit when they are brought to him Use. This exhorteth us to look more after the manner of praying An earnest and sincere prayer cannot miscarry judge by this and you cannot want
check our fears when trouble is near God is also near to counterwork our Enemies and support his People Zech. 3. 1 2. And he shewed me Ioshua the high priest standing before the Angel of the Lord and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him And the Lord said unto Satan the Lord rebuke thee O Satan even the Lord that hath chosen Ierusalem rebuke thee is not this a brand pluckt out of the fire Where there is Satan to resist there is an Angel to rebuke as extremities draw nigh God draweth nigh When Laban with great fury followed after Iacob God followed after Laban and stepped between them and commanded Laban not to hurt him When Paul was like to be torn in pieces in an uproar God runneth speedily to his help 2 Cor. 1. 9 10. But we had the sentence of death in our selves that we should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the Dead who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us When Danger cometh to be Danger indeed you will find him a present help Use. 2. To quicken us and encourage us actually to draw nigh to God with the more Confidence that is let us address our selves to converse with him in his Ordinances for his Favour Mercy and Blessing that we may not stand afar off but come boldly To this end Consider whither we come by whom we come in what manner we must come or draw nigh to him 1. To whom we draw near to God as reconciled in Christ. If God were inaccessible it were another matter but divine Justice being satisfied in Christ we come to a Throne of Grace Heb. 4. 16. Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Gods Throne is a Throne of Justice Grace Glory To the Throne of strict Justice no sinful man can approach to the Throne of Grace every penitent sinner may have access to the Throne of Glory no mortal Man can come in his whole Person his heart may be there so it is said Heb. 10. 19. Having therefore Brethren boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Iesus as Petitioners are admitted to the Prince in the Presence Chamber the way to the Throne of Glory lyeth by the Throne of Grace we pass by one unto the other In short Christ stood before the Throne of Justice when he suffered for our sins Penitent sinners stand before the Throne of Grace when they worship him in Faith after the Resurrection we shall ever stand before the Throne of Glory and ever abide in his Presence Our business now is with the Throne of Grace to give answer and dispatch our suites There is a threefold Throne of Grace the Typical which was the Mercy-seat Psal. 80. 1. Thou that dwellest between the Cherubims shine forth the Real which is Christ Being justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Iesus the Commemorative which is the Lords Supper where is a representation of Wisdom and Obsignation of the Grace of Christ in the New Testament This Throne of Grace is set up every where in the Church it standeth in the midst of God's People as the Tabernacle did in the midst of Israel For God is always in all places nigh unto such as call upon him in Truth Ioh. 4. 23. The hour is coming and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him Access to God may be had every where therefore let us come 2. By whom we come by Jesus Christ Eph. 3. 12. In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him upon the account of his Merit and Intercession We should come without fear or doubt to him de facto as if his blood were running afresh 3. How we come with a true heart Heb. 10. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having an heart sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our bodies washed with pure water SERMON CLXX PSALM CXIX VER 152. Concerning thy Testimonies I have known of old that thou hast founded them for ever IN this Verse is a further Illustration of the last Clause of the former he had said there thy Commandments are ipsissima veritas now he amplyfieth that saying from Gods Ordination and Appointment Concerning thy testimonies I have known of old that thou hast founded them for ever The Prophet ends this Octonary and Paragraph with some triumph of Faith and after all his Conflicts and Requests to God goeth away with this Assurance that Gods word should be infallibly accomplished as being upon his own experience of unchangeable and unerring certainty Two things you may observe in the Words First The constant and eternal Verity of Gods Testimonies Thou hast founded them for ever Secondly Davids Attestation to it I have known of old that it is so What the Word of God is in itself and then what is the Opinion of the Believer concerning it 1. What the Scriptures are in themselves 1. For their Nature they are Gods Testimonies or the significations of his Will 2. For their Stability they are Founded there is a great Emphasis in that word and that by God thou hast founded them 3. For their Duration and everlasting Use in that word for ever of an Eternal Use and Comfort II. Davids Attestation or Perswasion of this I have known of old I here observe 1. His Perswasion 2. The date and standing of his Perswasion it was ancient I have known of old 1. His Perswasion I have known there is a twofold Knowledge the Knowledge of Faith and the Knowledge of Sense both agree with the words 1. The Knowledge of Faith I know that my Redeemer lives that is I believe it what we read concerning thy Testimonies other Translations read by thy Testimonies I have known by thy Testimonies the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have been perswaded of this by thy Spirit out of the word it self 2. The Knowledge of Sense and Experience I my self have known by sundry Experiences heretofore which I shall never forget 2. The Date and Ancientness of this Perswasion of old it was not a late Perswasion or a thing that he was now to learn he always knew it since he knew any thing of God that God had owned his Word as the constant Rule of his proceedings with Creatures in that God had so often made good his Word to him not only by present and late but old and ancient Experiences Well then Davids perswasion of the Truth and Unchangeableness of the Word was not a sudden humour or a present fit or a perswasion of a few days standing but he was confirmed in it by long Experience one or two Experiences had been no Tryal of the Truth of the Word they might seem but a good hit
it appear this is Gods Testimony for that word that is propounded to be believed as such cannot be perceived by ease neither is it known of itself to the Understanding neither is it demonstrable by evident Reasons as to make infallible Conclusions The Word 's giving Testimony of itself doth not solve it indeed one part may give Testimony to another and one Revelation be confirmed by another as the New Testament giveth witness to the Old and confirmeth its Authority but how shall we know that to be Gods Testimony I Answer we have it 1. Partly from the self-evidencing light of the Scriptures themselves they have passed Gods hand and have his Signature upon them as all his Works make out their Author There are Characters of his Wisdom Power Goodness and Holiness impressed upon them 2 Cor. 4. 2 3 4. By manifestation of the Truth commending our selves to every mans Conscience in the sight of God But if our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost In whom the God of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not left the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ who is the image of God should shine unto them The Gospel being the result of Gods Wisdom and suited to the heart of man for whose use it was calculated it hath something in itself to commend it to our Consciences It cannot be imagined that the hand of God should pass upon any thing and there should be nothing of his Character left on it to shew it came from God Look upon any fly or gnat any flower of the field or pile of grass And you may see some impressions to discover the Author of them So certainly if God shall set himself to write a book or set forth a frame of Doctrine to do man good surely he hath discovered his Wisdom and Holiness and Grace therein and that in plain and legible Characters that if man were not prepossessed and leavened with Prejudice and Corrupt Affections he could not choose but see it That there is such an objective evidence or aptitude in the Doctrine it self to beget faith in those that consider it is plain from that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 4. 2 3 4. By the manifestation of the truth we commend our selves to every mans Conscience in the sight of God without Miracle or other Confirmation if they had a clear eye 't is light which discovereth itself and all things else The reason why it is not seen is not in the Object because of any defect there but the faculty the visive faculty their eyes are blinded with Worldly Lusts. Well then when things are spoken so becoming the Nature of God and so agreeable to the necessities of Man and with such an evidence of Reason not to the Law only but also to the Gospel as to establishing of a way of Commerce between God and us and exempting us from the grand scruples that haunt us though these things could not be found out by humane Wit yet now they are revealed they carry a great suitableness thereunto 2. And Partly by the Testimony of the Spirit this is one way of confirming the Truth of the Gospel Acts 5. 32. We are his witnesses of these things and so is the holy Ghost whom God hath given to them that obey him Where the Apostles are mentioned as one sort of witnesses and the Holy Ghost as another the great office of the Spirit is to testifie of Christ Jesus Ioh. 15. 26. Even the Spirit of truth which proceedeth from the Father he shall testifie of me The Doctrine of the Gospel concerning Christs Coming and Power is so great a Mystery that 't is not believed and received in the World without the Spirit Upon the beginning of Christs Ministry in his Baptisme the Spirit appeared in the form of a Dove now the Holy Ghost doth two wayes bear witness of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Artificially and Inartificially Artificially per modum argumenti and Inartificially per modum testis Partly as he doth afford sufficient matter of Confirmation and Conviction in those miraculous operations in the primitive times And also as he doth perswade the heart and convince us of the Truth of the Gospel 3. There is Experience of the Truth of the Word in Gods hearing Prayers Psal. 65. 2. O! thou that hearest Prayer unto thee shall all flesh come Fulfilling Promises Psal. 18. 30. Thy word is a tryed word he is a buckler to all that trust in him Punishing the Wicked Hosea 7. 12. I will chastise them as their Congregation hath heard Rewarding according to the Rules set down in the Word Rom. 1. 18. and Heb. 2. 3. but of this by and by Thirdly Why we must understand consider and believe Answ. Both in order to our Comfort and Duty 1. Comfort If the Certainty of the Scriptures were more understood believed and thought of we should be more fortified against fears and sorrows and Cares and Discouragements whencesoever they do arise for as fire well kindled doth easily break forth into a flame so assent freely laid doth fortifie the heart against trouble 'T is very notable when the Apostles would raise the joy of Faith they plead the certainty of the Doctrine they delivered for it was comfortable in it self suitable to the Necessities of man all that needed was to assure others of the truth of it See 1 Ioh. 1. 1 2 3 4. That their joy might be compleat and full upon this certainty of evidence and compleat demonstration we could not be so comfortless and dejected if we were perswaded of the reality of these things So 2 Pet. 1. 8. believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious We should love Christ and rejoyce in the believing confident expectation of enjoying of him and where this is firmly believed afflictions cannot damp or hinder this joy A firm trust in the Promises of the Word will fill a man with Comfort and strengthen him against all difficulties Psal. 56. 4 10. 2. Our Obedience would be better promoted 't would be a remedy against boldness in sinning and coldness in Duty Heb. 3. 12. Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart of Unbelief in departing from the living God You cannot drive a dull ass into the Fire Prov. 1. 17. Surely in vain is the net laid in the sight of any bird Men do not believe the everlasting verity of the Scriptures and therefore are so bold and venterous they think they shall do well enough after all Gods Threatnings Zeph. 1. 12. And it shall come to pass that I will search Ierusalem with candles and will punish the men that are settled upon their lees that say in their hearts the Lord will not do good neither will he do evil Secondly Coldness in Duty how do the Scriptures reason against Neglect Heb. 2. 1 2 3. Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard lest at any time
uprightness giveth boldness with God in Prayer 1 Ioh. 3. 21. If our heart condemn us not then have we confidence towards God So Paul sheweth he was capable of their Prayers or a fit object of them Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us for we trust we have a good Conscience in all things willing to live honestly It is an error to think that Justification giveth us only comfortable access to God and Sanctification hath no Influence at all upon it We lye in some secret sin then our Plea is spoiled If God give thee an heart to adhere close to him in a constant course of Obedience the more you may be assured to be delivered The joy of our Faith is mightily confirmed by the Conscience of our constant respect and obseryance of the Word of God and firm adherence to him Use. If we would boldly come to God in our streights let us not forget or forsake our Duty nor throw off the profession of Godliness whatever we suffer from men Psal. 44. 17. All this is come upon us yet have we not forgotten thee neither have we dealt falsly in thy Covenant Yea from God though he seem to cast us off taketh no care of us Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet I will trust in him Diogenes Laertius telleth us of a Cynick that went to Athens to Antisthenes to be taught by him when often met with a repulse yet still insisted on his request SERMON CLXXII PSALM CXIX VER 154. Plead my cause and deliver me quicken me according to thy Word IN this Verse are three Requests and all backt with one and the same Argument The three Requests are First That God would own his Cause Secondly Deliver him out of his Troubles Thirdly And in the mean time before the Deliverance came Quicken him In the first He intimateth the Right of his Cause and that he was unjustly vexed by wicked men therefore as burdened with their Calumnies he desireth God to undertake his Defence Plead my Cause In the second He representeth the Misery and Helplesness of his Condition therefore as oppressed by Violence he saith Deliver me or as the words will bear Redeem me In the third His own Weakness and readiness to Faint under this burden therefore Quicken me Or in short with respect to the Injustice of his Adversaries Plead my Cause with respect to the Misery of his Condition Deliver me with respect to the weakness and Imbecillity of his own Heart Quicken me God is his Peoples Patron to defend their Cause his Peoples Redeemer to rescue them out of their Troubles the Author and Fountain of their Life to quicken them and support them accordingly we may beg of him as the Psalmist doth here Defence of our Cause the Deliverance of our Persons and the support of our Hearts 2. The Reason and ground of asking according to thy Word This last Clause must be applyed to all the branches of the Prayer plead my Cause according to thy Word deliver me according to thy Word quicken me according to thy Word for God in his Word ingageth for all to be Advocate Redeemer and Fountain of Life This Word that David buildeth upon was either the general Promises made to them that keep the Law or some particular Promise made to himself by the Prophets of that time The sum of all is this If we believe the Word of God to be true we may in a Righteous Cause with Comfort and Confidence ask Defence Deliverance and Support I begin with the First Request Plead my Cause Doctrine When we have to do with unjust and wicked Adversaries we should desire God to plead our Cause or as the Original will bear to judge our Iudgment or contend our Contention 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. litiga litem meam So others There is a threefold Cause that cometh usually into debate 1. Inter hominem hominem between Man and Man as between the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent Gen. 3. 15. And I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel Those that are born after the Flesh and those that are born after the Spirit Gal. 4. 29. He that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit The Children of God and Men of this World Ioh. 15. 19. If ye were of the world the world would love its own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you As between Wolf and Lamb Raven and Dove this is an old Controversie that will never be reconciled it is often set afoot in Kingdoms in Cities in Towns Ships and Villages and Families and will continue till the Worlds End For while there are two seeds there will be strifes and enmities Now in this quarrel and strife sometimes success is cast on this side sometimes on that as God seeth fit either to favour or to try and correct his Servants usually the World prevaileth being more numerous only let me tell you this Controversie doth not alwayes appear to the World unvailed or bare-faced Enmity to Godliness is such an odious thing in itself and hath so often miscarried that it is not for its interest to appear openly and in its own colours but under the mask and disguise of other pretences which are the more plausibly taken on when the holy Seed have scandalized their Profession and made the way of Truth to be evil spoken of and yet it is the old Enmity and Antipathy still as appeareth by the parties contesting their aims and designs and the means and wayes they use to compass them with scorning of Faith and Piety 2. Inter Hominem Diabolum between Man and the Devil he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Adversary 1 Pet. 5. 8. Your adversary the Devil like a roaring lion walketh about continually seeking whom he may devour and such an Adversary as hath Law of his side and by Law would carry it against all the Children of fallen Adam if there were not a new Court erected where Grace taketh the Throne So Rev. 12. 10. he is called the Accuser of the Brethren but it is our Comfort that as there is an Accuser so there is an Advocate 1 Ioh. 2. 1. If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the Righteous who also is the propitiation for our sins We shall do well to put our Cause into his hands and then it cannot Miscarry Satan will not be more ready to accuse then Christ to plead for us and he hath a greater interest in the Court of Heaven then our Adversary hath stronger Arguments to plead merits to represent therefore make him your Attorney to appear in Court for you 3. Inter Hominem Deum God hath a Controversie with us about the breach of his Law and our undutiful carriage to
we should look to our Confidence whether it be Faith or Security whether we rest upon a carnal Pillow or the Corner-stone which God hath laid in Sion Use. It concerneth us all to look to this whether we love the law so as to have gotten Peace of Conscience and Assurance of Gods Protection because of the ●…titude of Scandals and the Trials and Exercises we are put upon by Gods Correcting hand The Prosperity of the Wicked the Disgrace that is cast on the stricter ways of God the World being so full of Snares and Temptations that bring men to Sin and Ruin Omnia timeo saith Bernard quae placeant quae tristantur I am afraid of every thing of those things that please us and those that make us sad What shall a poor Christian do that he may not Miscarry 1. Be sure that your Resolutions for God and the World to come be thoroughly fixed and settled for you will be distracted with every thing if you be not at a point and have not chosen the better part and fully fixed your purpose The Apostle telleth us Iam. 1. 8. The double minded man is unstable in all his ways A wavering and inconstant Christian will not know which way to turn himself being disquieted upon all occasions 2. They never rightly begin with God that do not sit down and count what it may cost them to be holy Christians Luk. 14. 26. If any man come to me and hate not his father and mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters yea and his own life also he cannot be my Disciple If you have not a preparation of mind to suffer any thing rather than part with Christ you are not fit for his turn Like a man that sets on Building and hath not a Stock to hold out or designeth a War and is not provided with all necessaries to go thorough with it You must expect Temptations and Troubles because they serve to try whether you will hold your integrity and if God be not sufficient enough to be your portion never serve him Never pretend to Religion if you do not resolve to renounce all that is precious to you in the World rather than forsake it 3. Consider the necessity of standing to Gods Law whatever persecutions and sufferings you meet with There is no other way to be saved Ioh. 6. 68. Lord whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life Such as have a mind to quit Christ have need to consider where they shall find a better master Change where they will they change for the worse Obedience to the Word of God is the only way to Eternal Life and whatever Law you make to your selves God will judge you by his own Law 4. Be established in the peace of God and never break this peace to obtain your outward peace What a wound will it be to thy Soul and how shiftless and helpless wilt thou be when to make thy peace with the World thou hast broken thy peace with God! Therefore rise up against Temptations as the Trees refused in Iothams Parable to be Ruler over the rest Shall I lose my fatness another my sweetness to rule over the Trees Shall I to please men put my Conscience to a continual Torment and Anguish sell the Birth-right for one Morsel of Meat The remembrance will come into your minds when you had joyful Communion with God and his People whose Company you have abandoned every day of solemn Assembly will be a new Torment to you 5. When troubles surprize you consider how unbeseeming it is to take offence at Gods Providence 'T is an ill sign to be so apt to pick quarrels with God and Godliness it argueth little love either to God or his Law for love thinketh no ill of those whom we love they are Murmurers that said the ways of the Lord are not equal or what profit is there if we serve the Lord Mal. 3. 14 6. Consider The greatest hurt Satan intendeth you is not to hurt your Bodies but your Souls To bring you to be offended at the holy and righteous ways of the Lord he would let you enjoy the pleasures of sin to rob you of your delight in God and Celestial pleasures let you have all the World if it were in his power Matth. 4. 9. 7. Consider How short is the Prosperity of the wicked and those that turn aside to the wayes of sin Psal. 17. 14. They shall be cut off they are soon withered and dried up and all their outward Glory perishes with them 'T is a more prudent Course to adhere closely to God Iob 5. 3. I have seen the foolish taking root but suddenly I cursed his habitation 'T is a prediction he foretold that there was a Curse at the root of all his Prosperity SERMON CLXXXI PSALM CXIX VER 166. Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments THE Man of God had said Verse 165. Great Peace have they that love thy Law and nothing shall offend them now he particularly applyeth to himself what he had generally spoken before 'T is sweet when we can thus comfortably apply Promises and make out our own Title and Interest this is Davids work in this and the following Verses Here he maketh profession of two things his Hope and Obedience which indeed are the two great things that belong to a Christian Graces much praised and little practised Quarum multa sunt Elogia pauca Exempla They are fitly coupled together in his Plea I have hoped I have done For our Confidence in Gods Mercy is no greater than our Fidelity in his Precepts and they are both professed before God who searcheth the heart and tryeth the Reins Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments Doctrine Sound hope of Salvation is and must be joyned with a care of keeping Gods Commandments First I shall speak of the several branches of this Profession apart Secondly Then of their Conjunction First Separately and there I. Of the Profession of his Hope Lord I have hoped for thy salvation 1. The Object and thing hoped for is Salvation Salvation is Temporal or Eternal of the Body or of the Soul Rabbi David Kimchi understandeth it of the latter but it seemeth rather to imply help and deliverance out of dangers and distresses Indeed neither can be well excluded not Eternal Salvation for without that Temporal Deliverance is but a reprieve for a time not a total exemption from Evil not Temporal Salvation because before we come to look for our full and final deliverance God will try us by the way and train us up in the expectation of other things As men learn to swim in the Rivers and shallow Waters that afterwards they may swim in the Ocean and deep Waters So by expecting lesser things we learn to wait for greater both must be hoped for but with a difference Eternal Salvation absolutely but Temporal with submission to Gods Will. We have
Precepts that we may order our Practise accordingly There must be an habitual Aim and Purpose to please God 3. Patience a resolute continuance till our service be over This is the way I have chosen and here will I stick until the great reward come in hand Rom. 2. 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for honour and glory and immortality Eternal Life And Luk. 8. 15. The good ground brought forth fruit with patience That distinguished the good ground from all other grounds they had some little liking of it but never came to a serious choice but the good ground though there be several Weathers between Sowing and Reaping it cherisheth the Seed that it is ready at Harvest time so we pass through many Weathers before we come to our Harvest of Happiness and Rest. Doctrine II. That man which makes Conscience of Gods Commands is encouraged to seek help from him in straits First Such a one may be in great straits as David his own hand could not help him therefore he flies to God The Lord permits it that he may be trusted alone in his own hands he will break our carnal Dependancies and that his ways may be chosen for their own sakes and not for temporal Reward and that his Love to his own People may not be shewn too sensibly that the misteriousness of Providence may leave a room and place for Faith therefore doth God darken the Glory of the Godly with Afflictions and put them into straits that their own hand cannot help them Now in these straits those that make Conscience of Gods Precepts they are encouraged to seek help from Gods hand Why Partly because Integrity breeds a confidence so that a man which hath been faithful with God can look him in the face It breeds a confidence in Life 2 Cor. 1. 12. and in Death Isa. 38. 3. when they are sick weak and know not what to do they can fly to God And then Integrity also it entitles to Gods Protection all that heartily and sincerely depend upon God Prov. 10. 9. He that walketh uprightly walketh surely An upright plain-hearted Man that trusts himself under the shadow and protection of Gods Providence he hath no shifts and tricks this man shall walk safely God is engaged to defend him But the perverse that fly to their shifts God will disappoint them and shew them their folly Gen. 17. 1. I am God All-sufficient walk before me and be thou perfect Do you uprightly serve God and study to please him and you need not seek else-where for a Patron or for one to defend you and plead your Cause And partly too because they are exposed to the greater difficulties because they are faithful with God and trust themselves alone with his protection for so the Apostle 1 Tim. 4. 10. For therefore we labour and suffer reproach because we trust in the living God Faith begets faithfulness their dependance is upon God and their faithfulness costs them dear and so they suffer reproach because they did trust themselves in Gods ways by Gods providence As you stand in need of Gods protection you shall have it God will not forsake us in our greatest needs as the World will but in our greatest extremities when all carnal dependencies fail us he will not then is the time for God to shew himself He hath still a Providence and Fatherly care over thee but his power is especially engaged at such a time If you will take care of your Duty he will take care of your safety for he will either keep you out of Troubles or sustain you under Troubles SERM. CLXXXVII PSALM CXIX VER 174. I haue longed for thy Salvation O Lord and thy law is my delight IN this Verse you have a twofold Assertion or Protestation First Of a Vehement desire of the Salvation promised I have longed for thy Salvation Secondly A great Love and Complacency in the Word of God and thy law is my delight This Verse may be understood either of Temporal Salvation or Eternal Salvation the Words may be accommodated to either sense The context would seem to limit it to the former and so an enforcing of the second request of this portion Verse 170. Deliver me according to thy word Many Interpreters both Iewish and Christian carry it for the other Iewish Rabbi David Kimchi expoundeth it thus thy Salvation soeculo futuro and the last Clause thy law quia medium est ad salutem Christian Chrysostom Theodoret Calvin and because these senses are not contrary but subordinate I shall insist upon both 1. Let me handle the words as they may be understood of Temporal Salvation and so the sense will be I have long expected thy deliverance and yet do desire and wait for it the Preterperfect Tense as Vatabilus noteth includeth also the present for a long time I have expected thy deliverance and do expect help from thee and the other Clause thy law is my delight though this help seemeth to be delayed yet thy counsel is my Consolation and perpetual Delight The Words thus understood yeild us two Points Doctrine I. That Gods people do look to God for deliverance and longingly expect the accomplishment of it Doctrine II. We should delight in the Promise before the Salvation cometh For the first Point That Gods people do look to God for deliverance and longingly expect it The Point shall be discussed in these Considerations I. What Longing for Gods Salvation implyeth II. The Encouragements and Reasons of it III. What singular thing there is in this longing Expectation since 't is natural to all to seek Deliverance out of Trouble I. What it Implyeth 1. A sense of our Impotency or Insufficiency to save our selves and help our selves out of Trouble by any ways and means that we can find out and use Psal. 3. 8. Salvation belongeth to the Lord. Ionah 2. 9. Salvation is of the Lord. Salvation and Deliverance of all kinds is Gods Prerogative Royal and Gods proper work none can save and give peace when he commandeth Trouble and when he will save his People none can let 'T is an evidence of mens neglecting a Deity when they would help and save themselves in all Conditions without depending or imploying a God Iob 40. 9 14. Hast thou an arm like God then I will confess unto thee that thine own right hand can save thee Alass if we look else-where how soon are we disappointed Man is a mutable Creature his Affections change or his power may be blasted an Arm of flesh is soon dried up besides the distraction and uncertainty that we have while we depend upon man and look to man we involve our selves in greater miseries and meet with a shameful disappointment at last Sometimes man will not if he can sometimes cannot if he would If he will and can yet he shall not help us without God for what can the Instrument do without the Principal Agent the sword without the man that weildeth
that is as it groweth more Holy and Heavenly From our first Renovation we should be dying to this World and settle our Affections on a better much more when God beginneth to call us home then draw home as fast as you can For Means to this Desire and Longing there is necessary First A sound Belief of this blessed Estate or a certain Considence of the Truth of it 2 Corinth 5. 1 2. For we know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the Heavens for in this we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven Not a bare Conjecture but a certain knowledge Surely Heaven is Amiable and the object of our desires if we be perswaded of the Truth of it we will long after it Secondly A serious preparation for it 2 Corinth 5. 3. If so be that being cloathed we shall not be found naked They have made up their Accounts between God and their Souls sued out their Pardon stand with their Loins girt and Lamps burning then they Long and Wait when God will draw aside the Vail of Flesh and shew them his Glory A Seafaring man desireth his Port especially if Laden with Rich Commodities where there hath been diligent preparing there will be serious waiting and desirous Expectation While we make provision for our fleshly Appetites and Wills we dream of dwelling here we take it for granted they have no thought of removing to another place who make no provision before their coming thither When a Tenant hath warning to be turned out of his old house he will be providing of another and be preparing and making it ready before he enter upon it We now come to the second Clause thy Law is my delight Doctrine II. That we should not only Long for Salvation but delight in the way which leadeth to it Here I shall speak to two things First That we must take the way that leadeth to it Secondly That we must delight in the way First That we must take the way that leadeth to it I. Partly because of the nature of Gods Covenant which is conditional there is in it Ratio dati et accepti something required and something promised Isa. 56. 4. For this saith the Lord unto the Eunuchs that keep my Sabbaths and choose the things that please me and take hold of my Covenant Heb. 10. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Exod. 24. 4. And Moses wrote all the Words of the Lord and rose up early in the Morning and builded an Altar under the hill and twelve pillars according to the twelve tribes of Israel And he took the Book of the Covenant and read it in the audience of the People and they said all that the Lord hath said we will do and be obedient Surely in the Covenant of Grace God requireth conditions 't is not made up all of promises now a condition is this when one promiseth any good or threatneth any ill not simply but upon Covenant if the thing required be performed or the thing forbidden be committed the performance of the thing required is the condition of the promise the doing a thing forbidden the condition of the threatning 1 Sam. 11. 1 2. And all the men of Iabesh said unto Nahash make a Covenant with us and we will serve thee And Nahash the Ammonite answered them on this condition I will make a Covenant with you that I may thrust out all your right Eyes and lay it for a reproach upon all Israel And Luke 14. 32. While the other is yet a great way off he sendeth an Embassage and desireth conditions of Peace Now these conditions are twofold making Covenant and keeping Covenant 1. The conditions as to making the Covenant arise from the Law of Grace or the lex remedians Faith and Repentance Faith performed or omitted Iohn 3. 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting Life and he that believeth not the Son shall not see Life but the Wrath of God abideth on him So Repentance performed Ezek. 18. 30. Repent yee and turn from your transgressions so iniquity shall not be your ruin omitted Luk. 13. 5. except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish 2. Then conditions of keeping Covenant which is conformity to the Law of God or new obedience performed Psal. 84. 11. No good thing will he withold from them that walk uprightly omitted Heb. 12. 14. Without Holiness no man shall see the Lord. Wel then upon the whole we thus judge that 't is not enough to desire Gods Salvation but we must also delight in his Law that is to say we must repent and believe and so begin our acquaintance with God in Christ and we must also walk in the ways of Gods Precepts if we mean at length to be saved and to enjoy the vision of the blessed God that which is propounded conditionally we must not presume off absolutely and so make reckoning to go to Heaven as in some Whirl-wind or as Passengers at Sea are brought into the Harbour sleeping or to be crowned without striving II. From the nature of this longing and desire which must be Regular and according to the Tenour of the Covenant of Holiness as well as happiness and it must be strong so asto over-master contrary difficulties Lusts and Desires Let us instance in Balaam he said Numb 23. 10. Let me die the death of the Righteous and let my latter end be like his He saw that the State of a righteous man at the end of it is a blessed Estate and this he longed for but there was a double defect in his desire it was not Regular Balaam desired to be saved but he did not delight in Gods Law He would be at the journeys end but was loath to take the way there was a complacency and welpleasedness in the end but a refusing of the means Again This Desire was but a flash a suddain motion occasioned by contemplation of the Blessedness of Gods People but no operative transforming Desire a Desire which the love of the wages of unrighteousness prevailed over all men will long for Salvation but all men will not take a right course to obtain it and so 't is a wish rather than a desire if we long for Salvation but have not an Heart to use the means appointed thereunto where there is a true longing there will be an using the means and an using the means with delight they that will not submit to these Conditions or snuff at these Conditions as troublesome they do not long for his Salvation nor delight in his Law Secondly That we must delight in the way that leadeth to Glory but this Argument being handled in other verses of this Psalm 't is omitted here SERM. CLXXXIX PSALM CXIX VER 175. Let
p. 539 Constancy in Obedience will turn to good account at lastp 375 376 377. Vid. Perseverance Constant endeavours against Sin a sign of Grace p. 20 Constant Obedience from a new Principle p. 753 Constancy the glory of Obedience p. 339 Constant Zeal for God p. 855 Constant Obedience against all Temptations p. 668 Contempt of Gods Word two Reasons of it p. 1005 338 339. Must not drive from Duty p. 339 340 Contemptuous wanderers from Gods Precepts God will pull down p. 793 Contention with Equals a fruit of Pride p. 520 Contentment in trouble from the Faith of Gods Protection p. 768 We should be Content with what measures of grace God alloweth p. 905 Continuance in sin exceeding dangerous p. 21 Continuance in Obedience the same Reason to continue it that there was to begin it and more p. 341 Contraries subserve Gods designs p. 525 Conversation of a Christian should be a Hymn to God p. 1096 Converse with God delightful p. 952 Converse with Saints comfortable p. 504 505 Conversion occasioned by Afflictions p. 464 Conversion may be observed and known p. 603 Conversion Gods method in it 1. In Conviction of sin 2. Compunction for sin p. 603 604 626 1. By humbling for sin 2. Cleansing the heart 3. Binding up the broken heart p. 626 Conviction in various degrees p. 604 Convictions sti●…led harden the heart more p. 400 412 Convictions their saving effects p. 605 Conviction 1. By way of prevention 2. Humiliation p. 688 Corruptions always ready to break out upon us p. 790 A cause of Apostasie p. 803 Corrupt communication 1. Obscene 2. Calumniating 3. Proud 4. Passionate Discourses c. p. 1064. its evil p. 1065 Cost and charge in the service of God an Argument of true Zeal p. 853 A priviledge of the Covenant to be taught Gods Statutes p. 845 Covenant of works leaves no room for Repentance-p 838 Arguments to enter into Covenant with God and keep it p. 707 708 909. Covenant Right the priviledge of them that walk with God p. 7. Covenant of Grace in the form of Precepts and Promises p. 28 It differs from all other Covenants p. 941 Covenant between God and man is mutual p. 608 821 Difference and agreement between the two Covenants p. 906 907 908 Covenant not to ●…e modelled by our fancies p. 578 Covenant Relation to God implies an entire surrender of the whole Soul to him p. 683 It ought to be often renewed and why p. 706 when p. 706 707 Covetousness a great Enemy to Righteousness p. 818 and to obedience what it is p. 254. Reasons p. 257 Counsel Wisdom Understanding how they differ-p 737 Counsels of God are Commands p. 24. Counsel of God in his Word sufficient for all our necessities p. 153 Counsellors Gods Testimonies the best Counsellors p. 148 152 Evil Counsellors Envy Covetousness Pride Revenge p. 829 Courage Christian what it is difference between it and Military Valour p. 723. Objections answered p. 734 Courage for God A Christian must not only be Laborious as an Oxe but Valiant as a Lion p. 851 852 Court of Gods Iudgment p. 942 Creation discovers the Author to be God p. 9. End of Creation to make us seek God the Creator p. 13 397 448 It discovers God to be Merciful p. 437 Creation gives God a right to the whole heart and our whole Obedience p. 16 Creatures serve man man his Creator p. 589 498 Creatures when spoken of as eternal it must be understood of a Communicated and dependant et cruity p. 570 Creatures utmost perfection is Vanity p. 613 614 It is of a perishing Nature p. 615 Credit God stands upon the Credit of his Word p. 831 Cross hath done its work when it hath purged away our sins p. 868. We never more advance in Christianity then under the Cross p. 147 Cross serves to awake the drowzy Conscience p. 464 465 Crosses must 1. be looked for 2. prepared for 3. borne with patience when laid on us p. 966 Crown of Glory to be set against the Cross p. 592 Under the Cross to have good thoughts of God glorisies him p. 511 Crown of Glory forfeited by Apostacy p. 342 Crying to God in Prayer opposed to lifeless formality p. 898. We may cry we must cry to God and why so what it is to cry to God p 898 899 Reasons why men do not cry to God 1. They want a right sense of their necessities 2. They are tongue-tyed through guilt 3. They have no spiritual Desires 4. Nor Reverence of God 5. They want Faith p. 900 901 Cure of Sin two ways 1. by abating the inward Lust. 2. Removing the outward bait p. 867 Curiosity and Conscience p. 689 Curse of God the Nature of it p. 132 133 Curse of God lies upon every man by Nature p. 133 How to know we are not under the Curse p. 134. Custom no safe Rule to walk by p. 4 Custom in sin makes sin stronger p. 56. It it a second Nature p. 303 Customariness and Complement in praying make no business of that great Duty p. 920 D. DAY of Iudgment An account of thoughts words and actions to be given in that Day p. 39. the necessity of that Day p. 457 The Triumph of Gods Justice will be glorious at the last day p. 937 Daily grace to be sought as well as daily bread p. 789 Why God permits his Children to be in daily danger of their lives p. 74 728 Danger sense of it puts an edge on Prayer p. 916 917 Danger may be nigh to gods People p. 943. Reasons p. 943 944 Deadness of heart in the Children of God whence 1. From some sin committed 2. Some good omitted 3. Unthankfulness 4. Pride of gifts 5. Great outward Troubles 6. Carnal liberty indulged to themselves p. 597 598 Helps against deadness p. 601 602 Deadness of heart towards that which is good caution'd against p. 777 Deadness in prayer reproved whence it comes p. 890 900 Death to the Soul to be without sense of Gods Love p. 516 Death how far it may be desired and how not p. 104 1095 Ministers should Preach and People hear as if Death were at their backs p. 408 Death it self should not make us warp from the Word p. 732 Death not desirable for it self p. 1095 Deceitfulness of sin in two particulars p. 679 680. Decay first decays of the soul to be observed p. 344 Deceived wicked men are Deceived in their Trust p. 798 Deceivings of the Heretick the superstitious and the seeming Religious Person p. 799 Declame A man may declame against other mens sins and yet never mourn for them in secret p. 932 Declaring our Case before God argues sincerity p. 164 165 Defection of others should make us more esteem Gods Word why p. 871 Vid. Apostacy Degenerated man the worst of all Creatures p. 897 Degeneracy of Man and Mankind p. 496 1100 Degrees of Holiness p. 18 Degrees of love to the Word p. 867 868 Delays in turning to God dangerous